Closed Thread
Results 1 to 6 of 6

Google and your Website Speed Penalty

This is a discussion on Google and your Website Speed Penalty within the Google forums, part of the Search Engines category; Website Speed Penalty - Google is Testing Your Load Time - After Google started using website speed as a parameter ...

  1. #1
    Senior Moderator shortcircuit has much to be proud of shortcircuit has much to be proud of shortcircuit has much to be proud of shortcircuit has much to be proud of shortcircuit has much to be proud of shortcircuit has much to be proud of shortcircuit has much to be proud of shortcircuit has much to be proud of shortcircuit's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    United States
    Posts
    187

    Arrow Google and your Website Speed Penalty

    Website Speed Penalty - Google is Testing Your Load Time - After Google started using website speed as a parameter in their ranking algorithms every webmaster has a good reason to keep an eye on the page load speed of their website. Google’s bending over backwards to spread the word about this new speed penalty is proof in itself since big G is usually very secretive about pending algorithm changes.

    From the announcement we learned that the speed penalty was introduced following experiments by Google that revealed the impact website speed has on Internet users.

    But the results of the experiment come as no surprise even for someone that has started to use the Internet recently; users prefer websites that load faster and tend to spend more time on such websites. However, the search engine giant has been careful to state that even though website speed is now a factor, it is not the primary parameter for determining results. The quality and relevance of information is still the determining factor, but if your website speed is slow, you will receive a Google penalty.

    This implies that it is important for you as a webmaster to assess the speed of your website to determine whether you are moving further down the search engine results pages (SERPs) because your website is slower than your direct competitors.

    How Can Google Know Your Page Speed? - It's vital that you understand the basics of how Google’s algorithm determines your website speed and thus your SERP ranking. The search engine uses two main factors when it comes to speed assessment.

    First, your website will receive a higher speed ranking if it responds faster to Googlebot, the crawler program Google uses to find and index websites.

    Second, your website will also receive a good speed ranking if it records a faster loading time on Google Toolbar than your competition. To better assist you in analyzing your website speed, Google has added a page speed report to their webmaster tools found within the Google webmasters ‘lab’ section.

    The tool and the reports can be used to compare your website’s page load times to that of other websites. Once you are armed with the information of where your page ranks in the speed hierarchy, you can start to make the necessary code and structure changes to make it respond faster.

    Your first priority should be to make sure you have no SLOW pages on your site. Pages that take two seconds or more to load and pages that are marked as SLOW in Google Webmaster Tools need to be improved to avoid a Google penalty for website speed. When you have no slow pages left, try to make all your pages load in less than a second. Read on to see why this is important.

    Having a website that loads quickly has more benefits than just higher search engine ranking and avoiding a Google penalty. A website optimized for speed reduces the bandwidth required on your hosting service, thus reducing your overall hosting costs. Faster websites also provide a better browsing experience because users are able to get information faster and navigate through your website more easily.

    In addition, websites optimized for speed work better when accessed on mobile phones, PDAs and other devices that do not have the same level of processing memory as your standard laptop or desktop computer. Even though you can have a mobile variant of your website which is trimmed down, some users will want to view your site in full HTML on their phone or PDA and a faster loading website will have a better chance of successfully loading on such devices.

    As a webmaster, there are a number of free tools that you can use to improve the loading speed of your website. I have listed three of the more popular ones below:

    Page Speed - Page Speed is an open-source add-on for the Mozilla Firefox browser. It evaluates the speed of your website and gives you suggestions on how to improve your website speed.

    Page Speed runs tests on the architectural configuration of both your web server and your website’s front end code. After running these tests, it gives you a report on your website speed and suggestions on how to improve the speed of your website.

    Yslow - Yslow is a free Firefox add-on from Yahoo integrated with Firebug software for website development. It displays statistics, an evaluation report and also provides suggestions on how best to improve the speed of your website using best practices. Yslow comes integrated with other tools for performance evaluation, including Smush. Use it and JSLint to further enhance your website performance. Yslow is a Yahoo product but is still useful for avoiding the Google speed penalty.

    SSEL Speed Tools - There is also a website speed check at Secret Search Engine Labs where you can get a quick answer on how big your webpage is and how fast it loads. Use the website speed checker to improve the speed of your website.

    The Website Speed Quick Fix - There are several factors that affect page load speeds on your website, many of them technical and best solved by your webmaster or developer, but some changes you can do yourself as long as you have some experience with HTML and creating web pages.

    Reduce the number, size and quality of images and use less audio, flash and Javascript. Reduce the length of the page by splitting a long page into several short pages. Strip the source code of redundant HTML, Javascript and CSS code that just slows things down. Don’t use images and other components that are linked live from other domains; instead use a copy on your own server.

    And don’t forget to keep your eyes on Google Webmaster Tools to see how your site performs compared to the competition.

    * courtesy of Aaron Steinheinkel of a new search engine.

  2. #2
    New Hunter Web Design is on a distinguished road
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Posts
    13

    Default

    You can also cache the images on your website by editing your htaccess that will help speed up your site.

  3. #3
    New Hunter sophieharris is on a distinguished road sophieharris's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    uk
    Posts
    7

    Default

    Thanks for the post.

  4. #4
    New Hunter kalenbailey is on a distinguished road
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Posts
    1

    Default

    Page Speed is an open source add-on for browser. Google links to a number of tools to test if your site speed. I have evaluated how to increase sites speed and abstains it from the Google penalty. If you follow best practices, Then Your sites become so far and speedy.

  5. #5
    New Hunter andykeating is on a distinguished road
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Posts
    2

    Default

    Ya that's very true..Google considers loading time as one of the factors so that it can provide quality results to its users..i also personally feel this point is worth considering to ensure quality results to its users.. thanks Shortcircuit for the wonderful post!!

  6. #6
    New Hunter bermuda is on a distinguished road
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Posts
    26

    Default

    A few years ago, webmasters were not taking websites loading speeds very seriously but everything has changed considerably and today, slow loading websites which are powered by low quality hosting accounts, the ones which are not mostly uptime may experience drops in ranks or lots of their previous indexed pages may disappear from Google data resources over the net. This is something happening to all kinds of websites, profiles and blogs regardless of their niches and commercial fields online.

    In some cases we can also learn whether or not some pages are slow loading, for instance logs of pages can tell when Googlebot visited some URLs but it may not have fully re-crawled contents of the pages online because they were not fully reachable because of hosting related issues. Sometimes it may sound OK to spend a few more dollars to buy hosting accounts that are uptime and help having pages loading faster. Turning to lighter images and HTML codes too can be important.

Closed Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts