Most people wouldn’t believe it but Google has stepped up its performance measures not only on page content but now page speed and page performance. Just when we thought we had it all figured it out Amit Singhal and Matt Cutts decided to make things even more interesting.
We could just sit here all day, and cry in our beer but for us here at sibSystems we are appreciating what Google is trying to do. They are pushing the envelope for excellence; excellence in an industry that has to keep changing and moving for the better good of those that really put time and effort into making their sites – and pages not only kick butt in content but page speed and page performance. Google keeps pushing us to ultimately better ourselves and the industry.
It cannot be disputed, especially after looking at all the research data that Google did on page speed and page performance on the impact on behavioral measures of those searching the internet. Just by slowing the search page results by 100 to 400 milliseconds created huge impacts on the number of searches per user (-0.2% to 0.6%). Now many would say that, that is not a big number but when you stretch it over a week, month or even a year, you can start to see this impact.
Now, there are two major ways that Google measure page speed and page performance. 1. They look at how a page responds to Googlebot 2. The time of load measured by the Google Toolbar.
What does this really mean to us? Well as you can imagine even though speed is a new ranking factor, quality and relevance is still the main focus and concern for site owners. Don’t let the new change shake you up, stick to the plan of giving searchers good quality and relevant content and everything will work out BUT in the meantime we will share with you 6 ways to potentially increase your load time for users.
1. Remove any unnecessary fancy foo foo (unwanted java scripts or ajex files)
2. Compress your graphics. If images are not optimized for faster loading you are defeating your purpose.
3. Use clean code. HTML can be loaded with junk code. Complying to the latest W3c standards helps your web page be more compatible with all browsers and makes them more search engine friendly allowing search engines to index your web pages faster.
4. Use of content. Never use PDF or flash for your content. Presenting your page content in HTML allows for faster loads.
5. Hosting. You have to be on servers with fast processors. So really with this one, you usually get what you pay for.
6. Efficient web programs. For example, eCommerce or content management systems. A lot of these programs can have a lot of junk or unnecessary code which results in slower load times. Do you due diligence and read online reviews before you incorporate any types of web programs.
Remember, faster loading pages not only makes the Google gods smile on you but also keeps your visitors happy. Happy visitors mean more opportunity. So, even though the research percentages may look minuscule to the naked eye remember to compound it with mintues, hours, days, weeks and months of potential loss of opportunity.



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