Official statement
Other statements from this video 11 ▾
- 10:07 Le mobile-first est-il encore une priorité SEO ou un acquis définitivement intégré ?
- 11:33 L'App Indexing exige-t-il vraiment un alignement parfait entre app et site web ?
- 13:54 Faut-il vraiment débloquer CSS et JavaScript pour que Google indexe correctement vos pages ?
- 14:06 Le responsive design est-il vraiment la seule option viable pour le SEO mobile ?
- 24:09 Les redirections mobiles peuvent-elles vous coûter une pénalité manuelle ?
- 26:04 Comment tracker efficacement les performances de vos pages AMP sans perdre en granularité analytique ?
- 36:37 Pourquoi Googlebot n'indexe-t-il pas vos contenus chargés en lazy loading ou en scroll infini ?
- 37:00 L'App Indexing peut-il vraiment booster votre visibilité organique ?
- 42:59 AMP améliore-t-il vraiment le référencement de vos pages mobiles ?
- 48:52 L'architecture AMP est-elle vraiment aussi flexible qu'un site mobile séparé ?
- 72:47 Comment vérifier la conformité AMP de votre CMS sans passer par Search Console ?
Google presents AMP as a framework that speeds up page loading by simplifying the HTML and relying on a CDN network for optimized delivery. For SEOs, this means potentially reduced loading times without sacrificing ads or tracking analytics. The question remains whether this technical investment is still worthwhile in light of modern alternatives.
What you need to understand
What is AMP and how does it actually work?
AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages) is an open-source framework developed by Google that imposes strict rules on the HTML, CSS, and JavaScript code allowed. The idea? Eliminate anything that slows down the rendering of a web page.
The system relies on a distributed CDN network that caches AMP pages and serves them from the nearest server to the user. When someone clicks on an AMP result in Google, the page loads almost instantly because it has already been preloaded in the background.
Why does Google emphasize the continuity of ads and analytics?
This is the crucial question. If AMP drastically simplifies the code, how do you manage ad scripts and audience measurement tools that naturally add load to the pages?
Google has developed specific AMP components (amp-ad, amp-analytics) that allow for integrating these features while respecting performance constraints. These components load asynchronously and never block the main rendering of the page.
Is this technology still relevant for modern sites?
Google's statement remains cautious on this point. AMP had its heyday when mobile-first became paramount and poorly adapted desktop sites hindered user experience.
Today, with optimized JavaScript frameworks and Core Web Vitals as performance benchmarks, the question is posed differently. AMP ensures good performance, but at the cost of a complete technical overhaul and significant functional limitations.
- Simplification of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript to eliminate sources of slowdown
- Distributed caching via CDNs that preloads AMP pages even before the click
- Specific components to maintain ads and analytics without degrading performance
- Strict technical constraints that limit certain advanced functionalities
- Relevance to be reassessed against modern alternatives and Core Web Vitals
SEO Expert opinion
Does AMP really provide a competitive advantage on Google?
To be honest: AMP is no longer a direct ranking factor since the end of the AMP badge in search results. Google has officially confirmed that non-AMP pages can achieve the same positions if they meet performance criteria.
What matters now are the Core Web Vitals. A well-optimized standard page can easily outperform a poorly configured AMP page. The real advantage of AMP remains the guarantee of minimum performance, but it’s not a golden ticket to the top of the SERPs anymore.
What are the practical limitations that you're not being told about?
Google's statement glosses over the major functional constraints imposed by AMP. Complex forms, advanced JavaScript interactions, certain third-party widgets: all of these become complicated, if not impossible.
The paradox? Editorial sites that would benefit the most from AMP (news, blogs) actually need rich features for user engagement. The conversion rate can drop if the experience becomes too limited. [To be verified] depending on the industry and type of content offered.
In what situations does AMP remain relevant today?
AMP still makes sense for high-traffic mobile editorial sites that publish large amounts of textual content with few interactions. News media, for example, still find it valuable.
On the other hand, for an e-commerce site, a SaaS platform, or any platform requiring complex user journeys, AMP can become a burden. You will spend more time circumventing the limitations than enjoying the performance gains.
Practical impact and recommendations
Should you invest in AMP for a new SEO project?
The short answer: probably not, unless in very specific cases. Focus your resources on optimizing the Core Web Vitals of a standard version of your site. It's more flexible and just as effective.
If you manage a news media outlet with thousands of articles published each month and your audience is predominantly mobile, then AMP may make sense. But even in this case, first evaluate alternatives like Progressive Web Apps or a simple technical optimization effort.
How can you migrate to AMP without harming your existing SEO?
If you still decide to go ahead, the coexistence of both versions (AMP and standard) is crucial. Use canonical tags correctly: the AMP page points to the standard version as canonical, never the other way around.
Ensure that the content is strictly identical between both versions. Google penalizes AMP pages that present content that differs or is diminished compared to the desktop version. Tracking analytics must also be consistent to avoid distorting your attribution data.
What mistakes most often block AMP implementations?
The classic mistake: integrating incompatible third-party scripts that break AMP validation. Use the AMP validation tool before going live, as a single non-compliant tag is enough to invalidate the entire page.
Another trap: failing to properly configure amp-analytics components, which creates discrepancies between AMP and non-AMP data. These discrepancies make it impossible to conduct reliable performance analysis and skew strategic decisions.
- Validate each AMP page with the official Google tool before publication
- Correctly configure bidirectional canonical tags (AMP to standard)
- Verify strict content parity between AMP and standard versions
- Test amp-ad and amp-analytics components under real conditions
- Monitor the Core Web Vitals of both versions to compare actual performances
- Plan a rollback if business KPIs deteriorate after migration
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
AMP améliore-t-il encore le classement dans les résultats Google ?
Peut-on utiliser AMP sur un site e-commerce ?
Comment gérer le duplicate content entre version AMP et standard ?
Les pages AMP sont-elles toujours servies depuis le cache Google ?
Faut-il maintenir AMP si on a déjà migré il y a quelques années ?
🎥 From the same video 11
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 54 min · published on 10/12/2015
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