Are you ready for AMP? Ready or not, it's coming to Google search results, and it's arriving in a big way. Google has announced that they'll be showing Accelerated Mobile Pages in their search results for the “ten blue links.”
This means that sites that aren’t news-specific now have the opportunity to show AMP pages in Google’s search results.
AMP is a very lightweight version of a webpage that has been stripped of the many elements that cause a regular webpage to display slowly, such as tons of cookies, third-party Javascript, and slow-loading ad networks. This results in a page that loads lightning-fast, which is great for those who are on slower connections or simply don't want to wait for a regular, heavier page to load.
AMP has had a fairly positive reception both from site owners and from users. It's much faster and more streamlined for searchers, especially on mobile devices that tend to be a little bit slower connection-wise.
Not a ranking boost
It's important to note that AMP pages in the mobile search results do not receive an additional ranking boost. Google currently has the mobile-friendly ranking boost, and because AMP pages are mobile-friendly, they receive the same ranking boost.
There isn't an additional incentivized reason to use AMP strictly for ranking purposes. Don’t switch everything to AMP simply because you think you’ll get an additional ranking boost to help you beat out competitors.
There are indirect ranking benefits, though. For example, if searchers seek out AMP results, some sites could see higher clickthrough rates on their AMP pages. And as consumer awareness grows about AMP, that will likely rise.
Replacing mobile results
Google isn't showing additional search results based on AMP specifically. Sites with AMP won’t show two versions of the same page in the search results, one mobile and one AMP. Rather, if any of the pages in the SERPs have an AMP version, Google will show that instead of the mobile or desktop page that would normally appear.
Just as a mobile-friendly page has a tag at the front of the description snippet showing that it's mobile-friendly, AMP has the same thing. For AMP, those results are tagged with AMP and an encircled lightning bolt before the description.
Will you be penalized for not displaying AMP?
No, Google is not planning to penalize a site simply because it isn’t AMP. Your site will still have the same positioning in mobile search results as the mobile version of the page.
Google will simply replace the mobile-friendly page — or the desktop page, if a mobile-specific page isn't available — and show the AMP version of the page.
For sites that don't have an AMP version of their page in the SERPs, Google will opt to show the mobile-friendly page first, or the desktop page if there's no mobile-friendly version. But sites that are AMP-less will not be demoted in any way.
Do other ranking factors apply to AMP?
There's no reason to believe that some of the regular ranking factors wouldn’t apply to AMP pages, especially for those websites that are currently AMP-only. However, because of the nature of AMP, they likely wouldn’t be a concern.
This will include things like page speed. Because AMP pages are significantly faster than mobile pages, there’s no reason for a site owner to worry that they could be negatively impacted in rankings because of slow page speed.
Likewise, with the above-the-fold algorithm that targets sites with significant ads above the content, this again isn’t cause for concern as most AMP pages are “ad-light.”
But it is important to remember that while Google is crawling the mobile version and AMP version of pages, rankings are based on the desktop page. Thus, faults with the desktop page — such as slow page speed — could impact the overall performance of your AMP page positioning.
Should sites ditch their mobile version for AMP?
This question is going to become a bit more interesting as this rolls out to the 10 blue links. There are sites that are currently only available in AMP, such as the AMP Project website itself. But with Google now showing the AMP version in place of the mobile version, should site owners be concerned about having a mobile site?
Well, as of now, this is a Google AMP initiative. Other search engines haven’t announced the use of AMP in their own search results. First you'll need to consider whether other search engines have issues with sites that are AMP-only — for reference, Bing has no problems indexing AMP-only sites.
Another consideration is that AMP pages are definitely more bare-bones than your typical mobile page. You need to look at it from a user-experience point of view. Are there elements on a page that will negatively impact your customer's experience if they're not displayed on AMP?
Also, look at it from a resource perspective. For sites that maintain a separate m.site already, maintaining three versions of the page could be impactful from a resource and work hours perspective. This won’t be as much of a concern for those using responsive design, since changes made to desktop automatically get rolled out to the mobile version.
Will users gravitate to AMP results?
Just as many searchers gravitate towards search results that are tagged "mobile-friendly," it's very likely that some searchers, especially those on slower connections or those concerned about their data usage, will gravitate to those results that are in AMP format.
Also, because AMP pages tend to be less ad-heavy when compared to their mobile counterparts, some prefer AMP for this reason alone.
How popular is AMP?
At Google I/O, Google revealed that it has more than 150 million AMP documents indexed in their search results. And those documents are coming from 650,000 domains.
Many new sites are getting on board with AMP daily, and many large sites have added AMP pages to their entire website.
Is it country-specific?
Google is still rolling out AMP in the news carousel internationally. When AMP rolls out in the "ten blue links," it will be an international launch. So even if your country isn't currently showing AMP in the news section of the search results, AMP will show in the main search results when this goes live.
Is it live now?
No, this isn’t pushed live in the SERPs right now. Google has not said precisely when this will happen, other than they'll be making “this feature more broadly available later this year.”
Google notes that they've delayed this launch to allow sites time to implement Accelerated Mobile Pages before it goes live for all results. Because of AMP being so new and due to the learning curve involved, pre-announcing the change is particularly welcome in this case.
Ecommerce sites
Ecommerce sites can effectively implement AMP, and many have successfully done so in preparation for the suspected launch. But with no specific timeline for when it’s going live, there's a good chance this could go live in time for the upcoming holiday shopping season.
At the very least, ecommerce sites should make sure their content pages are AMP-ready. It doesn’t seem as though the various shopping carts have made their software or plug-ins AMP-friendly yet. But I expect that, on the heels of Google's announcement, they're scrambling to make their carts (or at the very least the product pages created through the cart software) AMP-friendly.
How to view AMP in search results
Google is only showing this to searchers who search through the Google AMP Demo URL, which can be accessed at g.co/ampdemo.
The demo shows how Google currently plans to display AMP in the search results, although Google could change the appearance before the official launch goes live in the SERPs.
Tracking AMP analytics
For those who have yet to set it up, Google does include information about AMP in their search analytics. You can drill down and see the specific keywords, positioning, clicks, and more just for AMP alone.
To find it, login to Search Console, click on Search Traffic, then Search Analytics. Underneath “Search Appearance” you can select “AMP.” Now you can drill down into AMP by pages, queries, etc. to learn more about how your AMP pages are seen and performing in search.
Setting up AMP
For those that are using a popular CMS such as WordPress or Joomla, there are already plug-ins to convert pages into AMP format. This makes it very easy for websites to make their websites AMP-enabled for searchers looking for AMP specifically.
Baby-step your way into AMP
You don't have to implement AMP across the entire site at once. You can choose to test it out on a few pages first, or convert sections at a time so the errors are less daunting. Those errors would also be cleaned up as you roll out the next section of the site to AMP.
AMP errors
It can take up to a week or so for AMPs to show up in Google Search Console, so it's important that you go back and check which AMP errors show up on your site. There are some common errors, usually related to markup used in themes or missing logos, but Google’s help documents are fairly intuitive.
Google shows AMP errors on a per-page basis in their Google Search Console error reporting. And until these errors are fixed, those particular pages will not show AMP in the search results. The pages that are error-free will show. Site owners can correct the most widespread or significant errors first, then tackle the individual pages with errors.
AMP errors also show up on individual pages for specific elements on the page, such as where you might have embedded video or other elements that are not AMP-friendly.
You can find AMP errors, along with the number of indexed AMP pages, in the AMP section (within the Search Appearance section) of Google Search Console.
Google also has an AMP validator available.
Advertising on AMP pages
For those site owners concerned about loss of revenue, there are ad networks that comply with the AMP standards and can be used on your AMP pages.
The AMP Project maintains an extensive list of supported ad networks, including the most popular ones (AdSense, DoubleClick, and OpenX).
Social sharing & AMP
One of the newer features that Google has added to AMP is the ability to include share buttons for various social media platforms. Some site owners were reluctant to lose the potential for shares, since many sites derive a significant portion of their traffic this way.
The <AMP-SOCIAL-SHARE> tag doesn't yet support all social media platforms, but it supports the most popular ones (such as Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, and Google+).
Checking for AMP validation
There's a great extension for Chrome that will show you if an AMP validates properly, as well as show you any webpage that has an AMP version available. This is pretty handy if you need to do competitive research and wish to learn more about the pages or types of pages that your competitors have AMP enabled for.
The lightning bolt will appear green for a page that is AMP, and it will show blue with a link to tell you that an AMP version of the page is available. Just click it to view the page as AMP instead.
This extension also enables you to view the page from a desktop computer. Right now, the Google AMP demo requires you to use it from a mobile device, which isn't ideal for those looking at AMP from a site-owner perspective.
Getting help with AMP
Google also has an AMP support forum on the Google Webmaster Help forums for site owners running into any issues implementing AMP or getting it indexed properly. Multiple AMP experts regularly post in the forum answering questions and troubleshooting.
AMP resources
Suddenly find yourself having to get up to speed with AMP and don’t know where to start? Here are some useful industry resources.
- The AMP Project (and bonus, it's all done in AMP!)
- Google’s AMP documentation in Google Webmaster Help
- Guide to Getting Started with AMP
- AMP Github for developers
- AMP Webmaster Help Forums at Google
Great post Jen.
AMP is awesome, but it seems to favor big publishers because it's so difficult for non-developers to implement, even in Wordpress. (A lot of themes simply end up garbled) A number of plugins and helpers are being developed, but we still have a ways to go. I would estimate that only half of folks who implement AMP on Wordpress are happy with the results.
Postlight Mercury is one solution that works across multiple platforms: https://mercury.postlight.com/ It seems promising and I believe it works for a lot of people, but I'll confess it didn't look very good with the site I tried it on.
It seems your best bet is to be–or employ–a good developer who can customize your CMS.
Not to be a negative nilly. The AMP experience for users is awesome, and I find myself seeking out AMP news results on my phone. Looking forward to the day when it's easier for more publishers to implement.
Hi Cyrus,
Thanks for your advise. Would you please elaborate why it is difficult to implement AMP Plugin in WP? After reading this post I was considering to implement it but when I read your comment I got confused.
Hi Shariq,
I'm a Wordpress developer/user and I'm not 100% on AMP yet myself either. But I checked out the plugin recommended in the post above and it seems to only allow AMP on posts, but not pages. I can't say for sure why because frankly I don't know - sorry. However, for many of my clients I have highly optimised landing pages, not so many posts, so therefore this could be part of the difficulty that Cyrus is talking about - the limitation of the plugins. But Cyrus, being the wizard that he is probably knows other factors that I don't.
I think us Wordpress guys will have to wait and see how it unfolds. But, we've still got the tried and tested methods we can use.
Hope this helped a little.
Darren
Also, see Larry's post below:
We've played with a lot of the plugins. I deployed one of the AMP plugins on one of our lead gen sites for our blog, and it works... Sorta? But not functional enough. At that point it becomes a time / money / benefit analysis. Do we really want to hire a developer to do AMP? Can we even found one and will it fit out budget?
It is something I want to keep in my back pocket when we still road mapping and budgeting ver. 2 of our main ecommerce site, but even then I don't think AMP makes the cut.
I really need to stop commenting on Moz until I finish my morning coffee. Holy typos batman. Anyway ... The plugins are hit and miss. It was a nice training wheels, "Oh so this is how it works in theory" experience though.
I suspect now that it is coming to the "ten blue links" we will see some more AMP plugins released, so there are more options to see what works for each site, if the official one doesn't work well enough.
I think the plugin initially only did posts since when it was launched, it was only showing in the "in the news" section, which for most site setups would be posts. However, if you go to their github, it has instructions on how to do it for non-posts as well:
https://github.com/Automattic/amp-wp
The reason that most WP plugins are affecting posts only and not pages is that pages are mostly used as landing pages. Posts are used as... well... posts. Publications. I wrote something about AMP as well and I quote: "Thinking about our SEO Services site and how it would look like with AMP is just unimaginable. I think I’ll leave it as it is, thank you." If you're keen to check out my short post on it, here you go: https://seo-hacker.com/accelerated-mobile-pages-am...
I haven't had any problems with the AMP plugin so far... lots of AMP related errors showed up in Search Console, but they were all easily fixable. Rendering of AMP worked fine as well. What specific issues did you see Cyrus?
Although we have a team of WordPress developers, but I would still like to know that is it possible to install AMP plugin without developers or with beginner developer?
The best solution I found so far to integrate AMP in Wordpress is this plugin combination: Automattic's AMP Plugin + Glue for Yoast SEO & AMP (Yoast SEO required).
The AMP Plugin just enables AMP pages but have no other options. Then you get to setup the "glue" and that's when the fun begins. There, you can choose in which post types you want AMP enabled (posts, pages, custom post types...), design the AMP pages (change colors, add custom css...) and even integrate Google Analytics.
That's what I have been done in Wordpress setups and so far, so good. It's worth a try.
Here are some questions to kick off the discussion:
I really want to deploy AMP for our ecommerce sites, but both sites (one that is live and the other one that is in development) are backboned by WooCommerce. No real AMP support there. Not to mention we'd need it to work with GravityForms (which we use for our variable products) and GF's Woo add-on.
So right now, we're waiting for Woo and Wordpress to catch up.
I guess someone make the applicable plugin soon :)
I suspect it won't be long for at least one major shopping cart to come out with it sooner rather than later. Google had hinted they would be going to products with their AMP roll out, so unless they pay no attention to the industry, they should have suspected it could be coming.
Hi Jennifer! Phew! Google never stay quite! It's fine to improve this feature because, as you say, it's for loading some kind of websites (usually heavy) when we don't have a good connection. This is important, for example, when we are in places with magnetism like hospitals or in subways. By the way, again, AMP just clarifies us AGAIN that Google is extremely worried about user's experience and thinking about us (yeah! Im usually affected by poor connection and heavy pages when I'm traveling). You know, the 4G LTE becomes 3G, then 2G, then... well, it's history ;)
Thank you also for sharing the sources (AMP resources) to start exploring this new feature. Let's see what happen in the furute...
I travel a lot, and am especially conscious of data while roaming, so whenever I searched for anything newsy, I always chose AMP results first.
Woah! It's "magic." I've tried this these days and is true, specially when I search for notices. Thanks again, definitely I'll put this feature in my webpage (yeah, not fro ranking, but it is really fast... like the lightning that Rihanna talks about in her song with Calvin Harris).
Funny this should pop up here as myself and a couple of my developer and marketing friends were discussing this on FB just last night. Despite our wide range of experience and backgrounds none of us had looked much farther than the amp project website.
As a former developer and now digital marketer its only just on my radar so the speak and I'm not chomping at the bit to integrate it into any of the web properties I manage.
I do however have one or two micro sites that experience lots of traffic from mobile devices during the working day. So I suspect (also due in part to the niches these sites are concerned with), that these visit are from visitors who are out and about and likely on 3G or 4G mobile internet connections. These I think would benefit from or at least would be good testing platforms for AMP versions and the benefits of. But I will not be ditching the mobile friendly responsive design just yet.
Though I am not going to be easily convinced AMP brings many benefits. Especially as mobile internet speed continually improve and get faster, and phone contract included data packages grow too.
Even when I am on fast connections, I will choose AMP for speed and the user experience aspect of it. And right now, only Google is using AMP, so any traffic from Bing etc would go to the mobile version of the page. And same with traffic from links or type-ins, they would go to the mobile version as well, not AMP (unless they use something to force AMP).
A very good read, I personally thought that AMPs will be very beneficial for the ranking but thank you for correcting my mindset. While AMPs will greatly boost the sites' usability, they will also push the marketers to make some serious efforts in elevating their site's rank.
AMP still seems pretty taboo for most developers too. If you are going to install the recommended AMP Wordpress plugin you need to also install the Glue for YOAST SEO & AMP if you have YOAST installed which is a very common plugin. I found it very easy to configure on my site NexToronto WordPress Development.
[Link removed by editor.]
"Yoast Premium AMP Extension - Make sure your AMP pages are indexed properly, only $29.99"
A very good read, I personally thought that AMPs will be very beneficial for the ranking but thank you for correcting my mindset. While AMPs will greatly boost the sites' usability, they will also push the marketers to make some serious efforts in elevating their site's rank.
Yes, even without a ranking boost, I think we will see a CTR jump when searchers know what the AMP designation means, and when people seek out AMP results for speed / user experience.
Hi Jennifer
They say a picture is worth a 1000 words. And certainly I think AMP is a step in the SEO race, since the information received by the search engines is the same, but the user experience improves significantly. Will it be penalized if not displaying? It is not know, but in the best case, will start at a disadvantage with those websites that if you employ
Congrats for the post!!
Google wouldn't make the move where they would penalize for not using it. But differences in CTR could make AMP more appealing for some sites.
Nice article. Did you know that Google has there own guide on how to AMP your web pages (of course it's time consuming but it is worth it)
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/63402...
Especially when your audience is on mobile.
Very detailed guide thanks for sharing.
I am working for few publishers and they are facing issues in terms of ADs. AMP not supporting all the types of ADs.
There are plugins in wordpress to convert them to AMP but I never saw them act the way they should
Thank you Jennifer for a great post! We really loved the news that Google is now making AMP available for all sites, particularly ecommerce sites.
In your post you have mentioned that ecommerce AMP plugins are not available yet: "It doesn’t seem as though the various shopping carts have made their software or plug-ins AMP-friendly yet." However one AMP plugin was released recently for Magento Ecommerce platform from Plumrocket. I guess you can add a link to it for your readers. Similar to the one you listed for Wordpress, it automatically creates AMP versions of pages for Homepage, Category Pages, Product Pages and CMS Pages.
Lastly, I think its important to mention to the site owners that HTML forms are not supported yet. According to Techcrunch, the AMP team at Google is still working to add forms support. Therefore if your ecommerce site heavily relies on "configurable products" with many options - the AMP is not yet for you.
But is the overall purpose of AMP is to make site load fast and help give better UX, doesn't that mean is a booster for obtaining better ranking? At least that's how i feel people should be looking at it. If you have really good cereal, but don't have milk for it to go down fast, you wouldn't eat as much. Good content + Fast Speed = More traffic. No? I know it's still in its early stages, but the potential is huge. I think most people are pondering whether is worth spending all this time and money building it with /out a mobile website, and finding a company to develop it that knows what they are doing and finally that doesn't charge you an arm and a leg. (for small business owner/ bloggers) I got a quote from a website developer and i was getting charged $3600 for building the mobile site and the amp site + $250 in maintenance. (I'm a noob here) I don't like putting a price on other peoples work, but is this even worth it?
Hi Jen, thanks for a great post!
Do you know if there will be any duplicate content issue with AMP? I want to start using it, but I've got the feeling that I have to be extremely careful...
Thanks again! :)
Hi Noelia,
You can see AMP as some kind of a duplicate version of your 'normal' pages in the end. But what AMP does and supports as well is the canonical tag. So what you'll do on your AMP is that you link back to the original page and telling a search engine that, that is the original page. Meanwhile you do about the same on your normal pages. There you'll add a tag telling the search engines/ the vendors providing support for AMP that there is a special page marked up with AMP of this page available. Through this connection you'll avoid duplicate content issues.
Hope this was clear enough!
Martijn.
Great post on update AMP, The idea of AMP will get more popular within short period of time span as this will give benefit to both web owners and visitors.
Thanks Jennifer, we´ll for sure folow up on this to see how it evolves and if action is needed, specially if rankings get affected... Would it not be simply esier if speed of connections and devices ensured always a superb browsing experience? (!)
Rankings won't change with AMP. And the issue isn't always speed of the site, it is also speed of the searcher's internet connection.
It's great that the SEO community is picking up on SEO. For The Next Web we tried to be one of the first sites world wide to support this and together with our development team we contributed quite a lot to the open source repository.
In general I think that is quite useful to add to the discussion. The AMP Project is something that was initiated by Google together with a couple dozen vendors but is still open source which makes it that everybody can contribute to it to improve the speed/markup and progress on AMP. Overall that will make it more transparent what is being worked on and what we can expect from the project, also besides the integration within the search results.
Working for a big publisher in the tech news industry it also allowed us to see first hand the potential of AMP. At the moment we're already seeing that over 10% of our total pageviews (including mobile) is coming from AMP results. Which is amazing realising that the adoption rate is still very low with Google only supporting a dozen countries at the moment.
It seems for now that the focus around AMP is mostly around high volume news topics (think: Trump, Clinton, Pokemon, iPhone 7) and that's where we are for example seeing most traffic from but also one out of a few queries that will only show the AMP results at the moment.
Finally someone shared insight about AMP Pages:
My questions: if AMP doesn't effect on rankings and people already created mobile pages with limited data than what is the major benefit of using AMP? Just to implement light weight pages? and smart crawling.
Does it work for classified website as well if YES? anyone implemented it on classified site please share the case study?
Thank you for the article. Please move your social share buttons very distracting when trying to read.
Great article. Any body know the estimate date of release? If someone will looking for Magento Extension for AMP you can find it on Plumrocket Store.
Thanks for the great article!
AMP is a BEAST and developing a plugin that can combat all the possible CSS, non HTTPS erros that can arise from site to site is a real challenge which is why there aren't many super solid AMP plugins on the market yet. But they are coming. We've spent months on developing our plugin, and it's finally paying off. We average between 200-300 daily downloads and have a full time support staff to answer questions, fix problems but more importantly keep the plugin updated when all these errors flash up!
AMP Supremacy is our plugin on the WP Repo at #2! Please let me know your thoughts!
good and informative article, but I do not agree with it at 100%