Google on Check Page Factors Experience
Google on Check Page Factors Experience
Google on Check Page Factors Experience Google provides advice on how to evaluate whether your website matches the current page experience upgrade requirements. Google gives guidance in a new video to verify whether your site satisfies all characteristics of the non-core Web Vitals page.
This video is a fresh installation of Google’s YouTube Start With Page Experience series.
Google states that it classifies page experiences into two categories: Core Web Vitals and everything else.
This video focuses on all else. In particular, SEOs are taught how to check:
• Friendly mobile
• Use of HTTPS.
• Intrusive interstitial lack •
•Google feels they are necessary, together with Core Web Vitals, to provide consumers with improved experience.
•Here’s how you can confirm and track how each of these things affects your pages.
• HTTPS
• This is an easy check. Your site utilises or does not use HTTPS. If so, you pass the check. • Furthermore, it’s important confirming that the rel=”canonical” is set to your domain’s HTTPS version.
• Finally, verify that any non-HTTPS traffic is forwarded to HTTPS URL variants.
• Mobile Friendliness • Mobile Friendliness refers to a particular list of problems causing unsatisfactory mobile user experiences.
If your website is created with a current, responsive design, it will probably comply with all the mobile friendly standards.
In brief, Google checks to verify that text is not too little to read, links are not too little to touch, and there are no big indicators that mobile devices don’t have an optimised website.
Google suggests certain changes to guarantee a website is more mobile-compatible:
• Make sure information is scaled to the correct size when your website is opened.
• For tappable components provide a minimum height and width.
• These improvements, which probably require development support, might reduce irritation by users and offer a smoother navigating experience across your website.
• Other elements of mobile friendliness may require more effort, such as uninstalling obsolete plugins such as Flash.
•You may view particular URLs using the mobile friendliness tester to fulfil Google’s requirements and you can verify your complete site on the Search Console.
• No interstitial intrusive • This aspect can also be called irritating popups.
There is no automatic way to verify this, but you probably already know this if your site utilises automated pop-ups.
In general, Google advises that material unrelated to the entire page be avoided.
Users should not have to reject an interstitial before interacting with the website. Ads on a page should not interfere with what a person is attempting to do.
It should be noted that these criteria are not applicable to intersptititials for which: • Legal grounds (for example age verification) • Cookies • User logins • Paywalls for subscription
• Googlebot recognises these kind of lawful uses as OK.
• AMP pages checking • Google offers a dedicated tool to check AMP pages, but all of them probably already pass on experience aspects. By using the AMP page experience tester, you can be completely sure.