Pagespeed.compare
With pagespeed.compare you compare the speed of multiple pages. This could be 2, or it could be 12. More than 12 is not an option. This will give you insight into the difference of loading speed of your different pages. Or conversely, the difference between you and competitors. You do this online. Via the website pagespeed.compare. And it’s free.
What is pagespeed.compare?
The website uses information from Google PageSpeed Insights. This tool extracts field data from UX Chrome and lab data from Lighthouse. Field data is collected over a longer period of time. Lab data, on the other hand, is the data of that moment. Both are interesting and are used in the equation.
How the site works
The website is simple to use. You get clear information using graphs. You can easily read those graphs. This will help you see areas of improvement for your website or page. You can see how your site is doing relative to your competition. You’re not just comparing. You can also see what score Google assigns your page speed. The data insights are downloadable in an image file, CSV or JSON document. That gives you the ability to share this with your developers, for example.
Impact on SEO
Page speed is one of the aspects that affect your SEO. Comparing pages or sites on their speed does not provide direct insight into how to boost your position. However, pagespeed.compare does indicate where your areas for improvement are based on field and lab data. In fact, those dates are scored. However, you do see which pages have more areas of improvement in the comparison. With that, you also have a chance to improve your position.
My advice
This free tool combines information from several other tools and also compares pages. So one tool instantly gives you a lot of information. It is quick and easy. As a beginner, this is a practical tool, but also when there is little time to spare. It’s a quick check you can do. For example, you check where you stand. Hearty.
The most complete book on website speed
I’ve written so much about speeding up websites and everything involved that I like to divide it into different sections; general, tools, speed improvement points and tips. Feel free to see and consult all the links below to learn more about tools and tips for speeding up your website.
General
- What is the website speed
- Website speed: The division between marketing and development
- The influence of SEO on UX
- The influence of web design on SEO
- SPAs and SEO
- What are the Google Core Web Vitals?
Tools
Verbter points for speed
- First Contentful Paint (FCP)
- Time To First Byte (TTFB).
- Time To Interactive (TTI).
- Image for Largest view with content (LCP) preloaded
- Enable text compression
- Reduce the CSS
- Total Blocking Time (TBT).
- Speed Index
- Reduce JavaScript
- Largest Contentful Paint
- Avoid an overly large DOM
- Delete unused CSS
- Remove unused JavaScript
- Deliver images in modern layouts
- Connect in advance to required origins
- Preventing obsolete JavaScript from being delivered to modern browsers
- Use an efficient cache policy for static items
- Remove duplicate modules from JavaScript
- Avoid multiple redirects
- Encode images efficiently
- Use lazy loading
- Load important requests in advance
General tips
- Tips for quickly loading a video
- Using Edge SEO for a faster website
- Installing a Content Delivery Network for SEO
- Optimizing images for SEO
- The influence of hosting on SEO
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Pagespeed Compare?
Pagespeed.compare is a free tool that lets you compare the speed of multiple, up to 12, pages. So in this way you get insight into the loading speed of your own pages but this can also be relative to competing pages.
What is the impact of Pagespeed Compare on SEO?
There is no direct impact on SEO but the Pagespeed Compare does reveal where improvements can be made. If you carry these through, it does eventually have a beneficial impact.