Posts Tagged ‘page load time’

How Google Site Performance Can Increase Your Page Load Time

Monday, December 7th, 2009

Yesterday we discussed asynchronous tracking and page load time. But there’s more to page load than a simple script and I believe Google is about to get serious about including page load times in its ranking algorithms.

Google John Mueller has a great blog post on Site Performance and how it can help you improve your page load times.

I did a little bit of playing around with this tool and I’m pretty impressed. It’s quite simple, really, but very useful. Suggestions for improving a site’s page load time include such things as:

  • Enable gzip compression
  • Combine external JavaScript
  • Minimize DNS lookups
  • Combine external CSS

I’ve got a feeling these are all pretty common issues. For instance, how many CSS files do your pages have? A lot of webmasters use 2 or 3 CSS files for their pages when 1 will do. And DNS lookups can kill a site. If you have a lot of external files that are housed on another server, that can seriously slow your load time.

If you are serious about being a top-notch webmaster and want to improve your site's performance, take a good look at your page load times and do whatever you can to improve them.

Asynchronous Tracking And Page Load Times

Sunday, December 6th, 2009

It looks like Google may start putting more emphasis on page load times. Already, Google likes sites that load faster and if your site loads faster than your competition’s you will probably rank higher. In the future, if you have huge lag times in your page load time then you may get penalized or perhaps, if it is serious enough, even de-listed.

Why do I say this? Google Analytics has recently announced a new tracking code called asynchronous tracking.

Interestingly, asynchronous tracking is based on page load times. The code itself is supposed to make your pages load faster. Which is a welcome relief for many webmasters because most of us already know that too much code, or too much of the wrong code, can slow down your page load time. If Google Analytics is building new code to make your site load faster, I think that’s a sign.

What about you? Do you think page load time is about to become more important at Google?

Should You Use Autorun Videos On Your Site?

Monday, June 8th, 2009

We’ve talked before about how valuable videos can be for your site and even how to optimize them well. But we haven’t talked about autorun videos and I think this is a good time to mention that I wouldn’t recommend autorun videos. There are three primary reasons why I’d stay away from videos that load automatically when a visitor lands on your site.

  1. Poor SEO
  2. Slows your load time
  3. They annoy visitors

Let’s examine these three reasons briefly.

Videos are difficult to SEO because the search engines don’t crawl. Only recently has Google announced that it can crawl text in videos, but that ability is still quite limited. The best video optimization involves the use of surrounding text on the page and if you have an autorun vidoe then you likely aren’t going to have much of that. But supposing you do, the other two reasons should be enough to convince you.

Page load time is very important for search engine trust and rankings. The slower your page loads the more the search engines themselves will cast a crooked at you. Visitors too will not stick around for long if your pages load too slowly. So there’s a double whammy.

Speaking of annoying your visitors, you stand a good chance of losing a lot of traffic if you force your visitors to view content they don’t want to see. Your video may be the best video in the world, but if you force it on your visitors then they will resent it and many of them won’t return. In general, if you annoy site visitors you lose them forever. Don’t use autorun videos because people just don’t like them.