Official statement
Other statements from this video 13 ▾
- 0:54 Un TLD national comme .ro peut-il vraiment cibler des utilisateurs internationaux ?
- 1:38 Hreflang sert-il vraiment au ranking ou juste à permuter les URL ?
- 9:28 Pourquoi les site links multilingues échappent-ils au contrôle des webmasters ?
- 13:20 Faut-il privilégier les pages catégorie ou produit pour ranker sur Google ?
- 14:39 Comment Google traite-t-il plusieurs liens avec des ancres différentes vers la même page ?
- 18:01 Les redirections 301 transfèrent-elles vraiment tous les signaux de liens ?
- 22:14 La longueur du contenu influence-t-elle vraiment le classement Google ?
- 26:57 Penguin pénalise-t-il vraiment l'ensemble d'un site ou seulement certaines pages ?
- 32:25 Le désaveu de liens suffit-il vraiment à sortir d'une pénalité Penguin ?
- 34:49 Pourquoi Google teste-t-il d'abord votre nouveau site en mode optimiste avant de le rétrograder ?
- 37:36 Faut-il vraiment utiliser NoFollow pour tous les partenariats de contenu ?
- 39:36 Les pages AMP améliorent-elles vraiment votre classement dans Google ?
- 45:09 Google ignore-t-il vraiment les mauvais backlinks sans pénaliser votre site ?
John Mueller confirms that AMP can be used on any type of site, including e-commerce and educational sites. Some sites have even abandoned their traditional HTML version to adopt a 100% AMP model. This statement raises the question of the relevance of a total migration versus a hybrid implementation, knowing that speed gains must be weighed against the technical constraints and functional limitations of AMP.
What you need to understand
Is AMP really compatible with all types of content?
Google states that AMP can be deployed on any site, whether it's editorial content, product pages, or educational resources. This versatility is based on the evolution of the framework, which, beyond news articles, now supports more advanced features like forms, animations, and certain scripts.
Specifically, e-commerce sites have succeeded in transforming their product pages into AMP pages while retaining essential features: multiple visuals, variant selectors, purchase buttons. Educational sites, on their side, can integrate quizzes, videos, and interactive diagrams without leaving the AMP environment.
What does a complete migration to AMP really mean?
Mueller mentions that some sites have shifted their entire infrastructure to an AMP model, abandoning their classic HTML version. This radical approach removes the complexity of maintaining two parallel versions (HTML and AMP), eliminates content synchronization issues, and simplifies caching strategy.
A 100% AMP site serves the same pages to all visitors, regardless of their origin. The speed gains are consistent and development time focuses on a single codebase. This strategy may appeal to high-traffic mobile sites looking to maximize their Core Web Vitals.
What are the technical compromises of such a migration?
Fully migrating to AMP imposes strict constraints on custom JavaScript and certain advanced features. AMP components replace your usual scripts, which limits customization and may complicate the integration of certain third-party tools.
Sites with complex needs in tracking, user personalization, or advanced interactive features should reevaluate their tech stack before considering a total migration. What works for a news blog may not necessarily be suitable for a multi-reference e-commerce site or a complex product configurator.
- AMP theoretically supports all types of sites, but technical constraints vary based on functional complexity
- A total migration eliminates HTML/AMP duplication and simplifies maintenance, but reduces technical flexibility
- Speed gains are real and measurable, especially on slow mobile connections
- The JavaScript limitations remain the main barrier for sites with complex interactions
- The AMP ecosystem regularly evolves, adding new components and features
SEO Expert opinion
Does this statement reflect the practical reality?
Yes, technically AMP can be deployed on most sites. But the real question is not "can we" but "should we". The examples of complete migrations to AMP remain marginal in the SEO ecosystem. Most sites maintain a hybrid approach: AMP version for certain strategic pages, classic HTML for the rest.
Sites that have fully migrated to AMP are often high-traffic mobile media with relatively simple content models. Transposing this model to a multi-reference e-commerce site or a complex web app platform poses a totally different challenge. [To be verified]: Google does not provide quantitative data on the success rate of these total migrations or their SEO impact compared to a hybrid approach.
Do the speed gains justify the constraints?
The main argument for AMP is loading speed, particularly on mobile. AMP pages benefit from pre-rendering and Google caching, which can reduce load times by three or four times. For a news site or a blog, this is a massive advantage.
However, since the integration of Core Web Vitals as a ranking factor, a well-optimized classic HTML site can achieve comparable performance without the constraints of AMP. Modern techniques (lazy loading, code splitting, CDN, compression) allow for approaching AMP scores. The performance differential decreases when investing properly in front-end optimization.
When is a total migration not recommended?
Any site requiring advanced custom JavaScript should avoid a total migration. Product configurators, real-time comparators, complex booking interfaces, or user dashboards do not accommodate AMP's restrictions.
Similarly, if your business model relies on specific third-party integrations (certain CRMs, personalization tools, specific payment solutions), check their AMP compatibility before making any decisions. Many marketing and analytics tools require significant adjustments to work in the AMP environment.
Practical impact and recommendations
How can I assess the relevance of AMP for my site?
Start with an audit of your most strategic pages. Identify those that generate the most mobile traffic, have the highest bounce rates, or the worst Core Web Vitals. These are your priority candidates for an AMP implementation, not necessarily the entire site.
First, test a hybrid approach: deploy AMP on one category of content (blog, main product pages, landing pages) and measure the impact on traffic, engagement, and conversions for at least three months. This pilot phase will yield concrete data before considering a broader migration.
What mistakes should I avoid during an AMP implementation?
Don't dully duplicate your HTML content into AMP without specific optimization. AMP pages should be designed mobile-first, with an appropriate content hierarchy and clear CTAs. A simple technical conversion without UX consideration produces fast but ineffective pages.
Avoid neglecting the content synchronization between your HTML and AMP versions. A discrepancy in pricing, product availability, or essential information creates a disastrous user experience. Automate synchronization or, if that's impossible, prefer a total migration rather than a shaky system.
How can I measure the ROI of an AMP implementation?
Track three main metrics: loading speed (LCP, FID, CLS), mobile bounce rate, and conversion rate. Compare your AMP pages to equivalent HTML versions over identical periods. A speed gain without a conversion improvement does not justify the investment.
Also monitor your ranking in mobile results and your eligibility for AMP carousels (if relevant to your sector). Some sectors benefit from increased visibility due to AMP, while others do not. Data from your Search Console will provide a clear indication of the actual impact.
- Conduct a complete mobile audit before any AMP implementation decision
- Test AMP on a representative sample of pages for at least 3 months
- Check the compatibility of all your third-party tools with the AMP environment
- Automate synchronization between HTML and AMP versions if you opt for a hybrid approach
- Measure the impact on Core Web Vitals, mobile traffic, and conversions
- Plan a significant development budget for a total migration
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
AMP améliore-t-il directement le ranking dans Google ?
Peut-on utiliser Google Analytics classique sur des pages AMP ?
Les pages AMP peuvent-elles contenir des formulaires de conversion ?
Faut-il maintenir deux sitemaps distincts pour HTML et AMP ?
Une migration totale vers AMP affecte-t-elle les backlinks existants ?
🎥 From the same video 13
Other SEO insights extracted from this same Google Search Central video · duration 1h00 · published on 03/06/2016
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