: AMP version of entire website I read about Google's AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages) and I think it is a nice initiative. But I can't really determine the use of AMP for our website, since to
I read about Google's AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages) and I think it is a nice initiative. But I can't really determine the use of AMP for our website, since to me it seems more for article and product pages.
So my question is, will we benefit SEO and UX wise, for having AMP pages for our whole website?
We are a digital communication and web bureau and we sell services like web development, SEO etc. and we have a blog as well.
More posts by @Connie744
1 Comments
Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best
AMP is about making pages load faster so the use case so far is for reading articles / static content only.
It will give a slight ranking boost from Feb 2016 but I wouldn't worry just yet.
Page speed is a really important factor from a UX point of view though.
If you don't have huge resources use AMP if you have static stuff (text/IMG).
You should really consider streamlining your HTML/CSS/JavaScript and making your site as a whole perform better.
I would suggest looking at chrome dev tools and working with your developers. Your aim should be to make your site load as close to a second (or less = better) as possible.
Get rid of JavaScript your not using, make sure you concatenate and minify files, load HTML, CSS first only load JavaScript when needed. Parallelize images.
You don't need AMP. Focus on performance of your site, and it isn't required.
Terms of Use Create Support ticket Your support tickets Stock Market News! © vmapp.org2024 All Rights reserved.