Loading in 3rd party scripts from marketing tools (e.g. Intercom) can really hit site performance, in particularly Google's Time to Interactive metric)
Came across an awesome fix, thanks to @davejeffery from ToDesktop 🙏
“Time to Interactive” plummeted from 8.8s to 0.9s.
And since, Dave made this change ToDesktop's organic clicks and impressions have nearly tripled - Image
If you found this interesting you might wanna check out the full case study.
Oh wow, thanks for the mention Harry.
I think performance is too low on the priority list when it comes to SEO. You can see great results with little effort. Here's a few more tips.
Low effort, high reward:
Medium effort, medium reward:
I think loading ="lazy" is only supported by chrome so far, or am I wrong?
Yes, well Chromium-based browsers to be exact. Opera and Microsoft Edge will have it very soon if they don't already. Chrome + Opera + Edge is a very substantial market segment.
No problem Dave. Really really insightful comment. Thank you for sharing!
This is a great trick. :)
On the subject of performance, I think a lot of web developers get complacent because they are testing their sites over a fast connection. That hides a lot of issues.
Try surfing the web on a bad 4G or 3G connection and you’ll quickly become painfully aware of how big the download size is for many of today’s websites. (Lots of data available at HTTP Archive if anyone is curious about trends: https://httparchive.org/ )
Maybe ask yourself if you really need to add that extra script, or that huge image. :) It’s not free.
Point very well made Peter! Definitely a bias, because we all have "fast internet connections".
That is an excellent implementation. We saw really poor performance from installing Drift (multiple seconds load time, Google flagged a dependency as malware so de-indexed a site) as well as HotJar or other analytics plugins. Nuking these dropped our load time to under a second.
Interesting stuff. Cheers Gil. That's such a huge error on Drifts part ngl.
Could have snowballed into an absolute PR nightmare.