A few days ago we wrote an article about Google’s Matt Cutts anouncing (via his blog) that caffeine will be launched after the holidays. Matt Cutts shared his point of view about Caffeine and general changes Google made ‘under the hood’ to improve its search performance. In a nutshell, the new Google Caffeine will be more reliable, faster and more efficient in searching and indexing of web pages.
Matt Cutts was again interviewed by WebProNews. Cutts had revealed more details on caffeine and the changes Google made on the architecture of its revised search engine. Those were really great and we’re excited as well to hear that. But one thing that is really bugging several blogs and website owners is when Cutts said “Google is considering the website’s speed (less loading time) as one of the factors to affect its (website) rankings”.
..We’re starting to think more and more about “should speed be a factor in google’s rankings?”. Because, even in adwords if your site is slow that could be a factor how much you have to pay (in adwords). Historically, we haven’t use that in our search rankings, but a lot of people in Google thinks that the web should be fast, it should be a good experience; so it’s fair to say that if you’re a fast site maybe you should get a little of a bonus (higher rank)…
You may want to listen to the whole interview. Here it is.
Most of the tools Matt Cutts revealed were widely used. Personally, I wasn’t entirely ‘thrilled’ using them. We’ll get to that in a moment. The main topic to discuss here is Google’s plan to include the website’s Speed as a factor to decide if it should rank well or not. It sounds bias and discriminating to several blog and website owners, especially newbies.
Big “Joe” website will dominate in Google
Of course, if you want a faster website you need more powerful hosting provider which will drive your expenditures high. Typical webmasters avail medium scale hosting services after consideration of their capital and revenues. Most probably they will not be able to buy expensive dedicated servers or higher hosting services. On the other hand, big websites don’t have problems implementing this. They have the capital/money to buy expensive and powerful hosting providers to beef up their site’s performance and decrease loading time.
Matt Cutts earlier revealed about tools to optimize your javascripts and online sites to monitor your site’s loading time. I told you I wasn’t excited using it for the reason that those are mere “indicators” and they can’t tell more details about your site. I used a similar web page analysis tool from Yahoo! called YSlow, and it’s a similar add-on with Firebug on Firefox. I ran it and got frustrated with the results not only because my site’s score was terrible but also my website was only a month old!
I ran another site(with alexa rating of 20K) and was “visually” running faster than mine. The results were almost “the same” in YSlow. I concluded that these tools only give you hints what your site’s performance is. Also, don’t believe 100% that by merely “optimizing” your javascripts and removing “junks” in your website you’ll notice significant difference in loading time. Those were crappy theories, what you need is a better, more powerful and obviously more expensive hosting provider.
Big sites don’t always have great content
Not all big website owners are big advocates of delivering excellent info and articles to their visitors. Some do, but several cares only about “money”. They can afford excellent web hosting services because they have the money to spend. Where do they get the funding? From their online business of course.
Mediocre business owners and websites may get wipe-out and out of business because of this policy. The average bloggers might not have the chance to be discovered. But, who cares?
Wrap up
Anyhow, Google always reap the rewards if speed will or will not become a factor on being rank high in SERP. Billions of internet users are using the web everyday and Big G has a large chunk of the share. We’re all at the mercy of Google, even if 1 million blog owners protest we really can’t do anything if Google decide this should be the way.
But don’t lose hope, as Matt Cutts said “We’re thinking”, this could be a hint that Google might consider not to implement this or find a way to make Google rankings a level playing field to all (cross your fingers).
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Tags: faster sites rank higher, google caffeine, google caffeine after holidays, google caffeine launching, Google rankings, Google search, matt cutts, SERP

