REGISTER NOW: Uncomfortable Conversations: The Skills Crisis
REGISTER: 8THIRTYFOUR Skills Survival School Founding Cohort

What it REALLY Means to Be Mobile Optimized in 2019

Share This Post:

An image of a person holding a phone outlined in white.

It’s 2019, people. Everyone has a phone on them. In fact, we bet your phone is within arm length to you right now. 70% of web traffic happens on mobile devices, that’s why if your website isn’t developed to be awesome on a mobile device, you’re super behind.
As of July 1st, Google is officially indexing all new sites using mobile-first indexing. What that means is if your site isn’t mobile optimized, it’s going to hurt your search rankings. Because of our giving nature, we have come up with some great tips to get you mobile optimized in 2019.

What is Mobile Optimization?

Technically, it’s “the process of ensuring that visitors who access your site from mobile devices have an experience optimized from the device.”
That’s pretty wordy. As we mentioned before, 70% of web traffic happens on mobile devices (a.k.a. phones). People (and Google) need to be able to conveniently access and navigate your site or else they get frustrated and your metrics tank as a result.

Design Your Site for Mobile

First thing’s first: make sure your website looks good on a phone. This means no matter how your website appears on a desktop, it has to be able to reformat itself on a tablet or phone.
Responsive design doesn’t stop with aesthetics. Your design also needs to be easy to use and simple to navigate. Think about every mobile site you’ve been on. You’ve probably seen those three lines in the corner that expand into a menu. Elements like this are designed to optimize the mobile user experience, and they make sites easy, not frustrating, to navigate.

Optimize Mobile Content for Local Search

If your business serves a community, you need to make sure your mobile content is fully optimized for local search. Incorporate local keywords into headings and URLs. Add contact information, and use Google Maps integration so users can easily locate your business.

Page Speed

We’re a pretty impatient society, if page doesn’t load in seconds, we are out. Google measures mobile site speed to rank websites in search engine results, it’s also a huge part of the user experience.
Users want their sites to load in 2 seconds or less. That’s pretty stinkin’ fast. So how can you speed up your site and get your page loaded before people start bouncing?
Think small. If your code is complicated, make sure to minify it. If your pictures are huge, resize them. Bulky design elements and images can eat up precious loading time. Make sure to slim down your code to only include what’s necessary. Sound difficult? Don’t worry. We’re here to help.

AMP Up Speed

AMP stands for Accelerated Mobile Pages, and these things are about to be your best friends. If you want to get fancy, an AMP is a page that features extremely simplified HTML. It was specifically designed to make pages that load super quickly, so if your site is dragging, these guys are going to be a great solution. Connect with your developer and let them know that you need some AMPs to make your pages lightning quick.

Test it

Once you’ve implemented all of these tips, you need to make sure everything works. Luckily, Google released a tool: Google’s Mobile Friendly Test. All you have to do is input your website’s URL, and Google does the rest. Your results will (hopefully) look something like ours:
a photo of 8THIRTYFOUR's Google Mobile Page results test
 
Mobile optimization is great, but it can seem overwhelming. Need someone to take care of your digital needs? Grab a coffee with us, and we can help you out.
 
 
 
 

Responses

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Recent Posts

Something on Your Mind?

If you ever need proof that personal brand matters...Kim got to see the @nasaartemis II launch in person as a direct result of her Big Deal Energy™. 

You need to work hard, show up authentically, and provide value. That was her message to a room full of students and young professionals at @western_michigan_pmi's theProject Collegiate Competition. 

The Big Deal Energy™ Workshop is on June 23. Register at the link in bio.
Employers think Gen Z is lazy, entitled, and will quit the second things get hard. That perception is keeping you out of the room before you ever get a chance to prove otherwise.

The good news is, you can flip the script, but it will take some serious work and a personal brand, or as Kim Bode refers to it: Big Deal Energy™.

Kim is speaking at theProject™ Collegiate Event, hosted by the Project Management Institute Western Michigan Chapter on April 14. She'll cover how to build a personal brand that actually sounds like you (not ChatGPT) and how you can show your value through social, content and networking. 

Link in bio to learn more.
No one talks about how lonely it is to own a business. The tough decisions land on you, the business doesn't pause when you need a break, and nobody - not your employees or your spouse - really gets it. 

If you know a business owner, tell them they're doing a good job. It matters more than you know.
The growth stage is the hardest part of building a business. 

Kim was recently quoted in @corpmagazine on what she sees running the Women's Entrepreneurial Fellowship: women who have built something, survived the hardest part, and are still doing everything themselves. The natural tendency to be humble and attached to their work creates unique business challenges for women; they put up walls because they can't be vulnerable. 

Meanwhile, when a woman CEO needs growth capital, she compiles three years of tax returns before a bank will schedule a meeting, while her male competitor closes the same deal over drinks.

When women have access to the right resources, they grow and invest back. Full article at the link in bio.