I’ll be honest. Most SEO conversations start with keywords and end with backlinks. But here’s what I’ve learned after two decades of designing and fixing websites: search wins follow user wins. When real people can find, read, and use your site without friction, rankings catch up—and conversions follow.
Let me paint a quick picture.
A buyer named Riya lands on your product page. The headline loads late. The “Add to Cart” button jumps as ads pop in. She taps—but the site hesitates. One second. Two. She sighs, goes back to Google, and clicks on a competitor.
That micro-moment is where UX and SEO meet. It’s also where you either win or quietly leak revenue.
Google doesn’t use a single “page experience score,” but its core ranking systems reward content that’s relevant and pleasant to use—secure, fast, mobile-friendly, readable, and free of distracting overlays. Google explicitly recommends aiming for good Core Web Vitals (more on those later) and avoiding intrusive interstitials that block content. In short: be helpful and human; the algorithms are built to notice.
And yes, UX progress is measurable. Google’s Core Web Vitals —three user-centric metrics—tell you if pages load quickly, respond fast to taps/clicks, and don’t visually jump around:
In March 2024, Google replaced FID with INP—a better measure of absolute interaction latency—across Search Console, PageSpeed Insights, and CrUX. If you haven’t reviewed INP in your reports yet, do so now.
Here’s the opportunity: as of mid-2024, roughly half of sites pass all Core Web Vitals —which means the other half don’t. Getting into the “good” half is a real, defensible edge.
A fast, steady, usable site helps with:
We’ve seen again and again that tiny speed gains compound. A well-known study conducted by Google and Deloitte found that a 0.1-second improvement in mobile speed increased conversions by 0.4% for retail and 10.1% for travel, while also boosting page views and average order value. That’s not theory—that’s real shoppers spending more.
And performance isn’t just a lab number. When Brazil’s QuintoAndar reduced INP by 80%, their conversions rose 36% year-over-year — speed changes behavior. Behavior changes business outcomes.
Think of UX as the rails that carry both users and crawlers safely to the right place:

When we (UXGen Studio) take on a site, we start with people, not plug-ins. Our 5-part approach:
Bottom line: you get pages that feel fast, look trustworthy, and guide users to the next step—exactly the behavior Google’s systems tend to reward.
This is where our marketing team takes the baton and runs:
A mid-market B2B site came to us with sliding rankings and expensive paid leads. We didn’t start with a keyword tool. We began with behavior.
Results at 90 days: better Web Vitals across the board, 18% higher organic conversions, and less money burned in paid search because organic reclaimed high-intent traffic. (Your numbers may differ, but the pattern repeats: fix UX first, SEO grows sturdier roots.)
For a public analogue of speed → outcomes, consider QuintoAndar’s case: -80% INP, +36% conversions. Performance work pays.
Days 1–15 — Discover & baseline
Days 16–45 — Design & fix foundations.
Days 46–75 — Content & CRO
Days 76–90 — Prove & scale
If you’ve been stuck chasing keywords while ignoring what users feel on your pages, you’re not under-optimized—you’re under-loved. Let’s fix that.

1. Is UX a ranking factor?
There isn’t a single “UX score,” but Google’s core systems reward content with a strong page experience. Core Web Vitals are used by ranking systems, and Google recommends meeting these thresholds. Relevance still wins, but UX can tip the scales when helpful content competes.
2. We already passed CWV. Is the work done?
No. “Passing” is a floor, not a ceiling. Continue measuring with real-user data, especially INP, as features and scripts evolve.
3. Pop-ups hurt SEO?
Intrusive interstitials can harm the page experience and make content more problematic for users and search engines to access. If you npopupspups, keep them lightweight, timed, and easy to dismiss.
4. How do internal links help rankings?
They clarify your site structure and help Google discover and understand pages. Use descriptive anchor text that matches user expectations.
5. What’s a realistic business impact?
Every site is unique, but speed and stability have a significant impact on user behavior. A study conducted by Google and Deloitte found that a 0.1-second speed improvement was correlated with 8–10% higher conversions. That’s why we tie UX work to CRO from day one.
If you want a site that feels effortless to use and find, we’d love to help. UXGen Studio will make it fast, clear, and trustworthy. UXGen Marketing will turn that solid foundation into durable, compounding SEO growth. Let’s build something users—and Google—can’t ignore.
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