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2023 SEO Trends: Stay Focused on User Experience (Core Web Vitals in 2023)

What is the state of Core Web Vitals & the importance of page experience in 2023?

 

Why SEOs & marketers should continue to focus on page experience in 2023

Back in 2021, Google rolled out Core Web Vitals as part of its ranking system. This update put user experience front and center on SEOs’ agendas as a priority for the years to come. Since then, it’s been more important than ever to ensure your website’s technical health is primed to provide users with a great, seamless experience on your website. But in 2023, many sites are still not succeeding with improving their Core Web Vitals.

Of course, UX has always been beneficial when it comes to customer sentiment and conversions, but with the added search ranking factor introduced by Core Web Vitals, elements like site speed and page experience are not just the responsibility of designers and developers anymore — digital marketers and SEOs also have to take responsibility for monitoring and improving elements like site speed and responsiveness.

Senior technical SEO Anne Berlin notes the ongoing importance of page experience in search engine optimization:

“Particularly for news publishers, site speed can be the difference between landing a Top Stories placement or not. Google takes a first pass at indexing the content and considers it for ranking before it’s gone through the rendering queue. Given the increased importance of timeliness, the speed and completeness of content that Google can glean from this first indexing pass has extra weight.”

What’s more: there are plenty of business benefits associated with great page experience that extend well beyond your search ranking.

When it comes to site speed, for example, even a one-second delay in mobile load times can impact conversion rates by up to 20%, according to Mary Ellen Coe, president of Google Customers Solutions. Businesses that have the website intelligence insights they need to monitor and improve key user experience factors on their website are poised to retain and convert more visitors. 

 

Many websites are still failing to meet Google’s standards for Core Web Vitals

Even though Core Web Vitals were rolled out in Google’s search systems back in 2021, website teams have been slow to meet best practices when it comes to user experience

In our “Core Web Vitals — One Year On” webinar with Rebel Mouse’s founder and CEO Andrea Breanna, she noted that progress on the open web to bring websites’ UX in line with CWV standards is slow. She points to the fact that 77% of sites still failed Core Web Vitals in 2022. That’s only 10% better than when CWV were first introduced.

77% of sites still failed Core Web Vitals last year. (That’s only 10% better than when the ranking signal was first rolled out!)

Source: “Core Web Vitals — One Year On” webinar
 

3 Page Experience Elements to Improve on Your Site in 2023

If you want to adhere to Core Web Vitals best practices in 2023, here are three page experience elements to focus on:

1. Load Time

For Google’s Core Web Vitals, load time is measured by “Largest Contentful Paint” (LCP). This is the time it takes for the page’s largest image or text block to load and become visible within the viewport (that is, the visible part of a page that users can see within their device or monitor). Aim to have the largest block rendered within 2.5 seconds of the page starting to load. 

2. Interactivity

Google measures interactivity by “First Input Delay” (FID), a responsiveness metric. This is the time it takes for the browser to begin processing event handlers in response to an interaction on the page. Your page should be able to quickly load and execute the required code in response to a user’s interaction — it’s recommended for these responses to occur in 100 milliseconds or less. 

3. Visual Stability

Visual stability on a web page is measured by “Cumulative Layout Shift” (CLS). You’ll want to minimize any unexpected shifting of elements on a page as a user is viewing it. This unexpected movement of page content can sometimes occur if various elements are loaded asynchronously. A CLS score is based on the number of frames in which unstable elements visually move, and the total distance, in pixels, that they move. Core Web Vitals best practices suggest a CLS score of less than 0.1. 

This data will come from Google’s Chrome User Experience (CrUX) report


For those still struggling to meet CWV standards: You can use Lumar’s website intelligence platform to measure and track your site’s Core Web Vitals metrics.

 

More resources to improve your site’s page experience

icon showing a gear and tools within a stylized browser window, representing learning more about the inner workings of website health

Free eBook: The Ultimate Guide to UX, CRO & SEO

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Website Intelligence Academy >> Page Experience Articles

icon showing a gear and tools within a stylized browser window, representing learning more about the inner workings of website health

Webinar On-Demand: Core Web Vitals, One Year Later — What’s New?

icon showing a gear and tools within a stylized browser window, representing learning more about the inner workings of website health

Client-Side vs Server-Side Rendering & SEO: The Hamburger Analogy (JavaScript & SEO Explainer)

icon showing a gear and tools within a stylized browser window, representing learning more about the inner workings of website health

How Page Experience Impacts Your Search Engine Ranking—and Revenue


Start building better online experiences today

Lumar is the intelligence & automation platform behind revenue-driving websites

Avatar image for Sharon McClintic
Sharon McClintic

Senior Content Lead at Lumar

Sharon is Lumar's Senior Content Lead. With a background that bridges both business strategy and creative writing, she’s enthusiastic about bringing an editorial mindset to B2B communications. She holds an MBA in marketing, an MA in creative writing, and undergraduate degrees in journalism and literature and brings 12+ years of experience in marketing and writing to her current role. When not writing or editing work by an excellent team of contributors, she’s often listening to (and making) podcasts, reading, or re-watching old episodes of Poirot. You can connect with her on LinkedIn.

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