Official statement
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Google states that user experience takes precedence over raw performance. An optimization that slows down the site but enhances UX should not be discarded, as it fosters loyalty and natural backlinks. This statement repositions Core Web Vitals as one factor among others, not an end in themselves.
What you need to understand
What does this statement from Google really mean?
Google is presenting a hierarchical principle: if you have to choose between pure speed and quality of experience, prioritize the latter. Specifically, a well-designed carousel, an interactive configurator, or a comparison tool may slow down the Time to Interactive by a few hundred milliseconds. This is not a problem if these features reduce the bounce rate and increase engagement time.
The underlying message? Core Web Vitals are not absolutes. A site with an LCP of 2.8 seconds that converts and retains its visitors will outperform a site with 1.2 seconds that offers no added value. Google acknowledges that its technical metrics can conflict with actual user behavior.
Why does Google emphasize loyalty and links?
Because these are indirect behavioral signals that Google can measure. A user who regularly returns, shares content, or creates a natural backlink sends a stronger quality signal than a good PageSpeed score. Google implicitly admits that its algorithms detect these patterns of long-term engagement.
This approach reflects a maturity of the engine: rather than sticking to binary metrics (fast = good, slow = bad), it seeks to capture nuance. A site that fosters loyalty generates repeat visits, better organic CTR on SERPs, longer sessions. All these signals count in ranking.
What does Google mean by 'optimizations that slow down loading'?
Google is likely thinking of interactive features: calculators, data visualizations, customization widgets, custom video players, advanced filter systems. These elements add JavaScript, increase Total Blocking Time, and degrade CLS if poorly integrated. But they create user value.
A typical example: an e-commerce site that incorporates a visual search tool or a 3D configurator. These features are resource-heavy. If they lead to a huge conversion boost and reduce product returns, Google clearly says: keep them. The business and behavioral impact will offset the technical penalty.
- UX takes precedence over speed metrics when it generates engagement and natural backlinks
- Core Web Vitals remain important but are no longer an absolute ranking criterion
- Loyalty and incoming links are indirect quality signals detectable by Google
- Costly interactive features are justified if they deliver measurable value
- The algorithm seeks to capture nuance rather than binary technical thresholds
SEO Expert opinion
Does this stance align with real-world observations?
Yes and no. There are indeed sites with poor Core Web Vitals that dominate their SERPs because they enjoy massive authority and high organic click rates. Typically: online media with lots of ads, marketplaces with complex features. They remain on the first page despite a 4-second LCP.
However, there is a survivorship bias: these sites already have a base of authority and backlinks that protects them. For a newer or less established site, Core Web Vitals hold relatively more weight because there are no other strong signals to compensate. Google isn’t saying 'ignore speed'; it’s saying 'don’t sacrifice UX for 200 ms.'
What nuances should be considered for this statement?
The phrase 'if they improve user experience' is deliberately vague. How does Google measure this improvement? Probably through signals like adjusted bounce rate, engagement time, repeat visits, CTR in SERPs. But these metrics are not public, and their exact weight remains unknown. [To be verified]
Another point: Google refers to 'loyalty and links' as results. The problem is, backlinks can take months to build and only concern certain types of content. A transactional site can have excellent UX without ever generating natural links. The statement implicitly favors editorial sites over pure e-commerce.
When does this rule not apply?
If your optimization slows the site without measurable benefit, it should obviously be discarded. For example: a hero section animation that adds 800 ms to the LCP without increasing scroll depth or reducing the bounce rate. Google does not cover this case in its statement, but the logic reverses.
Similarly, some sectors have higher speed expectations. A news site taking 3 seconds to load will lose its visitors even if the content is excellent, because immediacy is part of the editorial promise. UX includes speed in this context. Google generalizes a principle that remains segment-dependent.
Practical impact and recommendations
What should I concretely do on my site?
Start by auditing the features that slow down your pages. Identify those that degrade Core Web Vitals (using tools like PageSpeed Insights, Chrome DevTools, WebPageTest). For each one, ask yourself: does this feature generate measurable engagement? Check your analytics: time on page, scroll depth, interactions, conversions.
If a resource-intensive feature improves a business KPI, keep it and optimize its implementation rather than remove it. For example, a product configurator can be lazy-loaded, its JavaScript deferred, and its critical assets preloaded. The goal is to minimize impact without sacrificing functionality.
How do I balance speed and functionality?
Test under real conditions. Deploy a trimmed-down version to a traffic segment via an A/B test. Compare bounce rates, session durations, conversions, pages per visit. If the faster but less enriched version performs worse on these metrics, it shows that UX indeed takes precedence.
Also monitor external signals: acquisition of organic backlinks, brand mentions, recurring direct traffic. These indicators evolve more slowly but reflect the loyalty Google talks about. A site generating word-of-mouth and natural citations has a long-term algorithmic advantage.
What mistakes should be avoided in this approach?
Do not confuse technical complexity and user value. A site overloaded with widgets, pop-ups, and unnecessary animations does not create an experience; it creates noise. The UX Google refers to is the one that solves a problem, facilitates a task, or enriches understanding. It’s not about impressing clients with a demo.
Another pitfall: completely ignoring performance under the pretext that 'Google says UX takes precedence.' A site that takes 6 seconds to load on mobile has no chance of fostering loyalty. Google’s statement assumes a minimal performance level that has already been reached. It speaks to those weighing between an LCP of 2.3 and 2.8 seconds, not between 2 and 6.
- Audit features that degrade Core Web Vitals and measure their impact on engagement
- Prioritize technical optimization of costly features over their removal
- Test speed/functionality trade-offs via A/B testing on traffic segments
- Monitor loyalty signals: direct traffic, repeat visits, natural backlinks
- Maintain an acceptable minimal performance level (LCP < 3s, CLS < 0.1) even with rich features
- Avoid unnecessary complexity that does not provide measurable user value
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
Les Core Web Vitals ont-ils perdu leur importance avec cette déclaration ?
Comment Google mesure-t-il la fidélité et l'engagement utilisateur ?
Un site e-commerce peut-il justifier un LCP élevé avec cette logique ?
Quelle est la limite acceptable de dégradation des Core Web Vitals ?
Cette déclaration favorise-t-elle certains types de sites ?
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