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Official statement

For a new website, it's recommended to first create fantastic content, and then gradually improve speed. Speed should not be the top priority at the expense of content quality.
6:57
🎥 Source video

Extracted from a Google Search Central video

⏱ 59:39 💬 EN 📅 22/01/2021 ✂ 15 statements
Watch on YouTube (6:57) →
Other statements from this video 14
  1. 0:41 Google limite-t-il le trafic Discover en fonction de la capacité serveur ?
  2. 2:02 Le serveur lent ralentit-il vraiment le crawl sans affecter le ranking ?
  3. 6:05 Les Core Web Vitals vont-ils vraiment changer la donne pour votre référencement ?
  4. 10:38 Faut-il vraiment utiliser des ancres (#) plutôt que des paramètres (?) pour tracker vos URLs ?
  5. 12:12 La recherche de marque est-elle vraiment un facteur de classement Google ?
  6. 14:17 Comment mesurer l'autorité d'un site si Google refuse de donner une méthode claire ?
  7. 20:38 Les pop-ups mobiles peuvent-ils vraiment tuer votre SEO ?
  8. 25:21 Les redirections 301 HTTP vers HTTPS font-elles perdre du jus SEO ?
  9. 28:33 Google compare-t-il vraiment le contenu des vidéos et des articles pour détecter la duplication ?
  10. 29:37 Le contenu dupliqué est-il vraiment sans danger pour votre positionnement ?
  11. 37:06 L'indexation mobile-first affecte-t-elle vraiment le classement de votre site ?
  12. 44:48 Google Analytics peut-il ralentir votre site au point de pénaliser votre SEO ?
  13. 52:16 L'indexation mobile-first impose-t-elle vraiment un site mobile-friendly ?
  14. 58:02 Discover utilise-t-il vraiment les mêmes critères de qualité que la recherche classique ?
📅
Official statement from (5 years ago)
TL;DR

Google states that for a new site, the top priority should be creating high-quality content, with speed coming after. This means it's better to publish solid content on average infrastructure than the other way around. This hierarchy of priorities reshuffles the cards for website launches, where there is a strong temptation to refine the technical stack before having anything to say.

What you need to understand

Why does Google bother to specify this hierarchy?

Because too many sites launch with flawless infrastructure but poor content. The race for perfect Lighthouse scores creates an illusion: a site can be ultra-fast and have absolutely no value for the user.

Google knows that new sites are often launched by technical teams who are more skilled in performance than editorial strategy. The message is clear: start by having something to say, you'll optimize speed later. The priority is to exist in the index with content that deserves to be ranked.

What does "fantastic content" really mean for Google?

Fantastic content meets search intent better than already ranked pages. There's no need for 10,000 words if 800 will suffice — length is not a criterion in itself. What matters: the depth of analysis, logical structure, and absence of unnecessary digressions.

For a new site, this means identifying niches where competition is manageable and producing content that provides real added value. If you're launching an e-commerce site in a saturated sector with generic product listings, no matter how fast your LCP is at 0.8 seconds, no one will find you.

Does this mean you can ignore speed at launch?

No. The nuance is: don't sacrifice content quality to gain 200 milliseconds. If your site is terrible (5 seconds loading time, LCP at 4 seconds), fix the major issues. But don't spend three months optimizing every query before publishing a single page.

Speed remains a confirmed ranking factor, especially through Core Web Vitals. Simply put, for a new site without authority, backlinks, or history, speed will never compensate for weak content. Google tells you: build your editorial foundations first, you'll fine-tune the mechanics later.

  • New Site = prioritize content: first create a solid base of pages that meet real intents
  • Speed second: fix blocking issues (loading time > 3-4 seconds), but don't seek technical perfection before having content
  • Gradual improvement: once content is online and crawled, optimize speed through iterations without breaking everything
  • No excuses for slow sites: "prioritize content" does not mean "ignore performance" — just a matter of project order
  • Editorial quality can’t be made up: a fast site with mediocre content will remain invisible, the opposite is less true

SEO Expert opinion

Is this statement consistent with what we observe on the field?

Yes, largely. Sites that rank without being ultra-fast are numerous, especially in niches with high editorial value. Conversely, no one has ever seen an empty yet speedy site rank sustainably on competitive queries.

That said, there is a bias in this statement: Mueller talks about "new sites", not mature ones. For an already established site with solid content, speed can become a crucial differentiator. The nuance matters: a starting site does not have the same priorities as an established player.

What limits should be set for this rule?

The first limit: it all depends on the sector. If you’re launching an e-commerce site in direct competition with Amazon, speed becomes critical from day one — user experience is a major differentiator. In that case, you cannot afford a slow site, even temporarily.

The second limit: Google does not clarify what it means by "gradually". How long can you afford to be mediocre in speed? Three months? A year? [To be verified] — no public data specifies this timing. The risk: taking this statement as a blank check to neglect performance indefinitely.

In what cases does this hierarchy become dangerous?

If you're launching a site in a sector where user expectations regarding speed are high (news, online tools, SaaS), deferring optimization could kill engagement even before the content has had time to rank. A slow site generates bounce, and bounce generates negative signals.

Another extreme case: sites that rely on virality or social sharing. If your fantastic content takes 4 seconds to load on mobile, it will be shared but little read. Performance then becomes a barrier to organic distribution. Do not confuse "prioritize content" with "ignore UX".

Attention: This statement does not exempt you from fixing blocking performance issues (underpowered server, unoptimized images, JS blocking rendering). Mueller talks about trade-offs, not negligence.

Practical impact and recommendations

What should you do concretely when launching a new site?

Start by defining your editorial strategy: what keywords, what intents, what depth of treatment. Identify 20 to 50 pillar pages that cover your main themes. Produce them carefully, without worrying about having a Lighthouse score of 100.

Next, ensure that your technical infrastructure does not sabotage the content: server response time under 600 ms, images compressed in WebP, no critical blocking JS. You don't need perfection, just a functional site that doesn't frustrate the user.

What mistakes should you avoid during this launch phase?

First mistake: spending three months optimizing the technical stack before writing a line of content. You lose ranking time, and Google won’t see anything to index. Better to have an average site online than a perfect site that doesn’t exist yet.

Second mistake: confusing "fantastic content" with "long content". A brick of 5,000 words without structure or added value is worth nothing. Focus on relevance, clarity, and unique angle. If you have nothing new to say, don’t say it in 10,000 words.

How to check that you're maintaining this content/speed balance?

Use Google Search Console to track the indexing of your pages and the queries that start generating impressions. If you have content but zero visibility after three months, it's either an editorial quality issue or a crawl/indexing problem.

On the speed side, also check your Core Web Vitals in Search Console. If more than 30% of your URLs are in "Poor" or "Needs Improvement", prioritize fixes. Otherwise, continue enriching your content. The trade-off should be data-driven, not intuitive.

  • Define an editorial strategy before coding anything
  • Produce 20-50 quality pillar pages before aiming for technical perfection
  • Fix blocking performance issues (slow server, heavy images, critical JS)
  • Publish the site and monitor indexing via Google Search Console
  • Track Core Web Vitals: as long as you are in "Good" or "Needs Improvement" on the majority of URLs, continue adding content
  • Optimize speed through iterations once the editorial base is established and crawled
For a new site, the top priority is content — speed comes next, through gradual improvement. Fix blocking issues, but never sacrifice editorial quality for a few milliseconds. Once the site is online with solid content, refine performance by monitoring Core Web Vitals. These optimizations, whether editorial or technical, often require specific expertise and a comprehensive view. If you lack the resources or time to orchestrate this launch, it might be wise to seek assistance from a specialized SEO agency that can effectively balance these priorities methodically.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

Est-ce que Google pénalise les nouveaux sites lents ?
Non, il n'y a pas de pénalité spécifique. Mais un site lent génère de mauvais signaux utilisateur (bounce, faible engagement) qui impactent indirectement le ranking. La vitesse est un facteur, pas un critère éliminatoire pour un nouveau site avec du bon contenu.
Combien de temps peut-on se permettre d'être moyen en vitesse avant que ça devienne un problème ?
Google ne donne pas de timeline précise. En pratique, tant que vos Core Web Vitals sont en "Bon" ou "À améliorer" et que votre contenu indexe correctement, vous avez de la marge. Mais ne traînez pas au-delà de 6 mois.
Un site ultra-rapide peut-il compenser un contenu faible ?
Non. La vitesse améliore l'expérience utilisateur et peut jouer à la marge sur des requêtes très compétitives, mais elle ne remplacera jamais un contenu pertinent et approfondi. Google classe du contenu, pas des scores Lighthouse.
Faut-il attendre d'avoir optimisé toutes les pages avant de publier un nouveau site ?
Non. Publiez dès que vous avez une base solide de contenu de qualité, même si tout n'est pas parfait. L'indexation prend du temps, autant la lancer tôt. Vous optimiserez la vitesse ensuite, par itérations.
Quels sont les problèmes de vitesse considérés comme bloquants au lancement ?
Temps de réponse serveur > 1 seconde, LCP > 4 secondes, images non compressées, absence de mise en cache, JS bloquant le rendering. Corrigez ces points avant de publier, mais ne cherchez pas la perfection sur chaque métrique.
🏷 Related Topics
Content AI & SEO Web Performance

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