Google Chrome Prerender Ranks Better

Every foreign trade company wants their website to rank first on Google, but many people may not have noticed that Google Chrome pre-generated, and this article will tell you that pre-generated ranking first is more beneficial to your website .
how do you knowHow to maintain the number one ranking of your website? Contributor Gene McKenna tells us that Google Chrome may hold clues.
 
Do you want to search for the best possible and top-ranking website? So how about having a strong metric ranking #1 and staying solid? A new browser-optimized approach to search results might give us a clue.
 
Around August 26th, our internal analytics system started reporting a significant increase in homepage views on Groupon.
 
It's rare to see a search marketing team complain about too many visitors, but all those new visitors are coming from Google Chrome alone. They just get to our homepage, mostly bouncing, and it's impacting our unit benefit metrics, all of that traffic comes from organic SEO.
 
This traffic we call Google Chrome traffic, it has been growing until September 25th, we have tens of thousands of additional Google Chrome requests per day. In contrast, other browsers show no growth at all. And we found that every country in the world started to grow at the same time.
 
We've learned that Google Chrome Prerender has been growing rapidly since September when Google search results pages added the prerender flag in Search Groupon.
 
So, what is a prerender? How does it work? Allow me to illustrate with an example.
 
If you search for Groupon, Google knows that nine times out of ten you will click on the Groupon homepage in the search results. This also applies to many other highly predictive searches: [cnn], [nytimes], etc.
 
In this case, Google Chrome fetches any webpage you might click on, before you even click on it. If you click and then click on a pre-generated result, Google Chrome will probably request the page again - probably already heavily cached for static items, to give users faster build times.
 
Half of our readers have now checked their site metrics to watch Google Chrome web traffic.
 
those who useGoogle AnalyticsThe site will not find anything unusual. Google Analytics does not record the use of pre-generated visit data, which is generally a good thing, as it is not really visit data itself.
 
Steve Souders, Director of Performance Engineering at Google, explained in October 2013 what he called "prebrowsing", also known as pre-generation. There are various flags in the pre-generation, which will tell the browser to pre-fetch DNS, pre-fetch resources, etc., which is very helpful to understand how to make your website develop faster.
 
With the ability to predict the user's next move, Souders can predict the best time to prefetch data and information.
 
Of course, Google can predict the first search result you are likely to click. Now, if you go to Google and search for groupon, you will see that the source code of the prerender tag in the search results page has the following pregenerated markup:
 

 
That doesn't mean that every time a search ranks #1, Google does it. It's a pity that the #1 Wham-O company for "frisbee" keyword searches doesn't have enough click-through rate to elicit a pre-generated tagged homepage search - if that's the case, that's how Google regulates.
 
Google Chrome has been executing prebuild directives since Chrome version 22 and IE version 11. (There are plenty of prerender directives worth checking out that can make your site go faster.) But we didn't really notice it until Google started throwing out prerender directives in search results.
 
When did Google Chrome pre-build start?
 
Might have started with a change in search. Wham-O had to wait a long time to get this frisbee pre-build. (Quick test: readers of this post can search for frisbee and click wham-o, and see if they start pregenerating.)
 
In late August, we started seeing it through the search groupon, ramping up around September 25th.
 
Even though we've only seen this data on Google search pages, if the predictive power is strong, it could also happen when a user starts typing in the Google Chrome address bar (omnibar, address bar). If you visit nytimes.com a lot, it probably crawled the homepage when you typed "ny" into the address bar.
 
Now, SEO has a new challenge. Being number one is good, but pre-generated being number one is even better. Not only will it give users a faster experience, but it also shows that you have a strong ability to rank #1.


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