Does Page Load Time Matter for SEO? |  | Visited: 2623 |
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| | by Roger Janik May 16, 2011 |
Page load time is defined as the time it takes for a webpage to fully
load in a browser showing all elements of a page. Does relative page
load time matter for SEO? Here's a question that has come up on my
radar a few times over the last few months. In fact, Matt Cutts of
Google recently spoke about it in one of his many blog videos (link
below). So, with so many people wondering does the speed to load a page
affect SEO, what is the answer? In short, the answer is yes, page load time does matter.
How Important is Page Load Time?
Okay, Matt Cutts confirmed that page load time is a factor in ranking
a site, but how important is it when it comes to ranking in the SERPs?
It's apparent that while page load speed is collected and measured as
part of Page Rank, (along with over 200 other variables), it is
reasonable to suggest that this variable is a low priority or
low/moderate variable. It is a low priority unless the speed is so slow
that it affects the ability for Google to visit and collect data from
your site. I personally visited plenty of web pages in many categories
and went through them all keeping track of page load time. Many links
on the first page were slower than pages on the second, third, fourth
and fifth page of listings. In addition, I tried to take a pulse of
what other SEO professionals and web developers were saying about this
as well.
From watching the Matt Cutts video (link located below) and many
other videos along with information regarding SEO released by Google and
other search engines, the key point they try to drive into web
developers and SEO/SEM professionals heads is that a quality built site
that offers visitors the best web experience should be the goal when
building a site. So, if your site is filled with unnecessary code,
filled up with distracting media and difficult to navigate, not only
will the user experience lack, but this will also be reflected in
reduced rankings.
Watch the video here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLmO1GE4GvI
How to Measure and Speed Up Your Site
Being a part of the SEO industry, I understand that part of success
is paying attention to the details. While load speed may play a minor
role in rankings, if you are currently building a new site/page or
tweaking a site, it pays to look at the load speed and improve it if
necessary.
Google is now stressing load speed with their improved Google Analytics code (found here: https://code.google.com/apis/analytics/docs/tracking/asyncTracking.html).
I definitely recommend that you not only add this code to the bottom of
each of your web pages, but also localize the Java script file.
This code now features what they call asynchronous syntax which, as
Matt Cutts explains, is a piece of Java code that will not load until
after the web page loads (this improves efficiency of load times). In
addition, Google has unveiled a new tool to measure site speed with
analytics reports (found here: http://analytics.blogspot.com/2011/05/measure-page-load-time-with-site-speed.html). This tool shown below can be a great way to determine which sites/pages are loading slowly and how to remedy the situation.

Obviously, there are many factors involved when it comes to the time
it takes for a web page to load such as the code itself on the page,
possible errors, the amount of text, images, media such as video,
widgets, etc. Other factors can also include: your internet connection
speed, your browser, the speed of site's server, amount of traffic
trying to access a site and distance between your computer and the
site's server. While there are many factors involved, generally
speaking Google will determine the speed of your site by the time "it"
takes its assets to access your full webpage, so keep that in mind when
you use other tools and find a discrepancy in times for loading.
Other Helpful Resources:
http://www.iwebtool.com/speed_test
http://code.google.com/speed/page-speed/
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/firebug/
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