Skip to content
Bold Digital Architects LogoBold Digital Architects Logo
  • Home
  • Programs
    • Foundational AI Visibility Program
    • Founder Domain Expertise and Executive Authority Program
    • Category Leadership at Scale Program
  • Case Studies
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact Us

B2B MARKETING BLOG

CHOOSE A TOPIC

  • B2B Marketing (39)
  • Inbound Marketing (35)
  • Content Marketing (27)
  • Digital Marketing (25)
  • SEM (17)
  • SEO (15)

Google’s Core Web Vitals: What Marketers Need to Know

About the Author: Ioan Gerosanu

SEO specialist and part of the Bold Digital Architects team for more than 4 years now!

Find me on:

SHARE THIS STORY

 

Googles Core Web Vitals- What Marketers Need to Know

In order to make performance evaluation easier, on May 28, 2020, Google launched Core Web Vitals, a set of three user-centric metrics called LCP (or Largest Contentful Paint), FID(or First Input Delay), and CLS (or Cumulative Layout Shift).

They were designed to help focus on the improvements that are most important when it comes to a seamless and enjoyable user experience.

Google began rolling out the Page Experience update on mobile devices between June and August 2021.

It’s important to understand that the global trend from Google (who is more or less shaping the internet and how we interact with it) is to make everyone develop mobile-friendly websites. This is why the Core Web Vitals are already official ranking factors for the mobile part of the search algorithm.

A big part of the world, India, and Africa, have almost no or low access to the internet and use devices with small screen resolution and slow connection. Google wants to shift webmasters’ focus on improving their mobile versions of their websites in order to facilitate access for everyone, no matter their technology or geolocation.

However, although the main light is set on mobile, the desktop traffic also matters a lot – this is why the Core Web Vitals will also become official Google Search ranking factors in February 2022.

This post will cover the core principles non SEOs need to know in order to come out of these updates standing.

How can you know how your website is performing?

Visit g.co/chromeuxdash to get started.

This will lead you to the CrUX (Chrome UX) community connection page, where you may specify the origin from which the report should be generated (a.k.a – your website). Note that you may be required to answer permission or marketing preference questions.

Source: Web.dev

You’ll get a report that depicts how your pages perform (sometimes called field data), broken down into:

– status
– metric type
– URL groupings (groups of similar web pages).

Note that this is based on real-world usage data and that it only contains URLs that appear in Google Search (which if you think of it makes total sense as the big G is giving you feedback on pages that are indexed in the search engine).

With the help of the CrUX report, you’ll be able to see how your users are actually consuming the content of your website. Are they able to quickly see the content? Can they scan the page in a couple of seconds?

This is huge news in an era where people are switching from desktops to phones and the internet connection is not always the best. Using this report you can promptly identify pages that underperform thus delivering a poor user experience that would lead to a loss of organic traffic (as the Core Web Vitals are directly correlated with search rankings) and potential sales.

Whether or not a URL is part of a Search Console property, the CrUX database collects information about any page that’s indexed. URLs are given the ratings Poor, Needs Improvement, and Good, per each core web vital, and broken down per device type.

Source: Web.dev

What can you do about your scores?

You can use free tools such as Lighthouse in Chrome DevTools, Google Search Console, and PageSpeed Insights to identify and optimize your LCP, FID, and CLS scores. While the CRuX report is more like a top-level report that you can check on a monthly basis and see how things evolve, these tools provide actionable insights and problems that one can tackle in order to work towards satisfying the thresholds for each metric.

It’s a powerful strategy to periodically check these tools and analyze the set of problems the tool indicates, and then discuss with your tech team to work towards fixing them.

What about Core Web Vitals for Desktop rankings?

Beginning in February 2022, Google will include page experience into their desktop ranking algorithms. The implementation is expected to be finished by the end of March 2022. This new ranking system will be based on the same page experience signals that Google introduced earlier this year for mobile.

Before Core Web Vitals becomes a desktop ranking indicator, and in turn, the CrUX report provides a desktop overview, Google announced that they will provide a Search Console report to help site owners understand how their desktop pages are performing in terms of page experience. The report is currently dedicated to your mobile URLs and it can be accessed using this URL: https://search.google.com/search-console/page-experience

An example of a report showing what % of a website’s pages are good in terms of LCP, FID, and CLS and the number of impressions they attract. This way you can clearly see what percentage of your website provides a good page experience.

Wrapping up

Core Web Vitals are definitely not something a marketer should ignore, and it’s more important than ever to identify your website’s weak spots and optimize your page experience as soon as possible. I hope this post makes navigating the page experience update less daunting.

Ioan Gerosanu
+ postsBio

SEO specialist and part of the Bold Digital Architects team for more than 4 years now!

  • Ioan Gerosanu
    B2B Marketing News Simply Put – June 2022
  • Ioan Gerosanu
    B2B Marketing News Simply Put – May 2022
  • Ioan Gerosanu
    30+ Credible Sources Google uses for Knowledge Panels
  • Ioan Gerosanu
    Google’s Knowledge Panel 101: How To Get One Without Wikipedia
  • Ioan Gerosanu
    Google’s Knowledge Panel 101: What’s it all about in 2022
  • Ioan Gerosanu
    Publishers Conferences in 2022 – the full list
  • Ioan Gerosanu
    Link Building 101: Taking Advantage of Quora and Reddit to Build E-A-T in 2021
  • Ioan Gerosanu
    Link Building 101: Using Online Communities and Forums for Backlinks in 2021
  • Ioan Gerosanu
    Link Building 101: Using Google Alerts for Backlinks in 2021
  • Ioan Gerosanu
    Publishing events in 2021 – the full list

SHARE THIS STORY

Previous
Next

Ioan Gerosanu

SEO specialist and part of the Bold Digital Architects team for more than 4 years now!

Blog Post Form
Blog Post Form

Recent Posts

Noa Eshed2025-04-14T17:24:39+00:00

Testimonial: Ron Jaworski Co-Founder, CEO Trinity Audio

Noa Eshed2025-04-11T18:51:01+00:00

How BioT Achieved Meaningful Growth with Strategic Thought Leadership & Content Marketing

Ioan Gerosanu2023-04-05T10:20:22+00:00

B2B Marketing News Simply Put – June 2022

Posts by topics

  • B2B Marketing (39)
  • B2B Marketing (39)
  • B2B Marketing (39)
  • Inbound Marketing (35)
  • Content Marketing (27)
  • Digital Marketing (25)
  • SEM (17)
  • SEO (15)
  • Marketing Automation (11)
  • Sales (10)
  • Social Media Marketing (10)
  • Lead Generation (7)
  • Reporting (6)
  • Email Marketing (5)
  • PPC (5)
  • case studies (5)
  • Conversion Rate Optimization (4)

see all

Subscribe to Blog

Subscribe to Blog
Bold Digital Architects

MENU

  • Home
  • Programs
    • Foundational AI Visibility Program
    • Founder Domain Expertise and Executive Authority Program
    • Category Leadership at Scale Program
  • Case Studies
  • Blog
  • About
  • Contact Us

CONTACT DETAILS

+972 54 571 0232
21 Rothschild blv. Tel Aviv, Israel

We88

FOLLOW US

AWARDS

PARTNERS

Page load link
Go to Top