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What is Page Speed?

Page speed is a measurement of how quickly the content on a web page loads and becomes interactive. It encompasses multiple metrics including Time to First Byte (TTFB), Largest Contentful Paint (LCP), First Input Delay (FID), and Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS), collectively known as Core Web Vitals.

Understanding Page Speed

Page speed is not a single number but a collection of metrics that capture different aspects of the loading experience. Largest Contentful Paint (LCP) measures when the main content of the page becomes visible, ideally under 2.5 seconds. Interaction to Next Paint (INP), which replaced First Input Delay in 2024, measures responsiveness to user interactions, ideally under 200 milliseconds. Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS) measures visual stability, ensuring elements do not jump around as the page loads, ideally under 0.1.

For e-commerce stores, the most common page speed killers are unoptimized images, excessive third-party scripts (apps, analytics, chat widgets, pop-ups), render-blocking CSS and JavaScript, and slow server response times. A typical Shopify store might have 15-25 third-party scripts loading on every page, each adding latency and competing for the browser's limited resources. Review widgets, in particular, can be significant contributors to page weight if they load large amounts of review content, customer photos, and interactive elements synchronously.

Google uses Core Web Vitals as a ranking signal, meaning slow pages are at a disadvantage in organic search results. Beyond SEO, the direct impact on conversion is well-documented: Amazon famously found that every 100ms of added latency cost them 1% in sales. For smaller stores, the impact is proportionally similar. A store loading in 2 seconds versus 5 seconds will see meaningfully different conversion rates, bounce rates, and average session durations.

Optimizing page speed requires a systematic approach. Start by auditing with tools like Google PageSpeed Insights, Lighthouse, and WebPageTest. Identify the biggest contributors to load time, often images and third-party scripts. Implement lazy loading for below-the-fold content, compress and properly size images, defer non-critical JavaScript, and critically evaluate whether each installed app provides enough value to justify its performance cost.

Why Page Speed Matters for E-Commerce

Page speed directly affects three critical outcomes: search engine rankings, user experience, and conversion rates. Google has confirmed that Core Web Vitals are a ranking factor, so slow pages lose organic visibility. Visitors who encounter slow-loading pages bounce at dramatically higher rates. And those who do stay convert at lower rates due to frustration and reduced trust. For Shopify stores where every millisecond counts, page speed optimization delivers compounding returns across SEO, engagement, and revenue.

How Eevy AI Helps with Page Speed

Eevy AI loads review sections asynchronously, meaning they do not block your page from rendering. The review HTML is fetched and injected after the main page content is visible, preserving fast LCP scores. This approach ensures that rich review content enhances your product pages without penalizing your Core Web Vitals or page speed scores.

Optimize your store with data, not guesswork

Eevy AI uses genetic algorithms to continuously test and evolve your review layouts, driving more revenue per visitor without manual work.

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