How to Score a Perfect 100% on Google PageSpeed Insights

By Neil Patel

Google PageSpeed Insights

When it comes to building a conversion rate and search engine optimized website, speed is crucial.

If you don’t have a fast website, people will bounce faster than you can say “conversions.”

However, speeding up your website is no easy task.

Your problem could be anything from code that’s written poorly to images or large page elements.

You need to fix those issues fast, because Google will ding your website if you don’t.

The faster your site loads, the lower the bounce rate. If your site is fast, you have a better chance of ranking on Google over slow sites that drive high bounce rates.

Thankfully, Google offers the PageSpeed Insights tool to find out what you need to fix.

Unfortunately, they don’t give you the best instructions on getting your score to 100%.

Here’s how to score a perfect 100% on Google’s PageSpeed Insights and why you need to accomplish this feat.

Why Page Speed Matters

Page speed is a critical factor in ranking your website higher on Google’s search engine results.

If your website isn’t on par with the top 10 organic pages, you won’t rank on the first page.

So focusing on page speed is paramount to having a successful company and a website that converts.

Backlinko recently conducted a study where they analyzed over eleven million search engine results pages (SERPs) on Google.

They wanted to figure out which factors were the most common among sites ranked in the top 10 results.

Surprisingly, they found page speed and ranking don’t seem to be correlated. However, the average load time of a site on the first page is 1.65 seconds, which is decently fast.

page speed insights report

However, Google says page speed does matter. There was even an entire update about it.

That connection is backed up and supported by Google’s new PageSpeed industry benchmarks.

They found that as page load times go up, the chance of someone bouncing from your site increases dramatically:

google page speed

That means that if your page takes 10 seconds to load, the likelihood of someone leaving your site before it even loads increases by more than 120 percent!

But according to a recent study of more than 5 million sites, the average website takes 10.3 seconds to load fully on desktop and 27.3 seconds to load on mobile.

This means almost all of us are missing the mark when it comes to having a fast-performing website.

In another study, BigCommerce found that conversion rates for e-commerce websites average somewhere in the one to two percent range.

Portent found page speed can increase conversion rates drastically.

Getting your speed to under two seconds can increase traffic and revenue.

So, what causes a page to …read more

Source:: Kiss Metrics Blog

      

Aaron
Author: Aaron

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