Today, more searches are performed via mobile devices than desktop computers. Correspondingly, Mobile commerce grew three times faster than e-commerce in 2015. Even if a mobile search doesn’t immediately lead to an online purchase, the search still plays a major role in purchasing decisions. Deloitte estimates the impact of mobile search to be close to $970 billion on offline purchases, according to Search Engine Watch. In a mobile-first world, speed matters. Nearly half of all visitors will abandon a website if it takes more than three seconds to load. Google’s solution? Force companies to speed up their websites.
Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) is a stripped-down version of the mobile web. AMP eliminates all “extra” information about a web page, super-charging load speed. Since this has been found to be of paramount importance to mobile surfers, Google places AMP sites at the top of organic search results when it detects that a user is on a mobile device. Consequently, non-AMP sites are penalized and pushed further down, regardless of their content or relevancy.
Remember 2015’s so-called MobileGeddon, when businesses panicked that their websites would be penalized if they weren’t mobile-friendly? Google giving prime positioning to AMP sites is the new MobileGeddon, and most brands aren’t prepared. Fortunately, the stripped-down nature of AMP makes it easy to create AMP versions of the most critical and visible portions of your site. This is a must if you want to maintain or improve your standing in mobile search results in 2017.