Is Google PageSpeed Just an Illusion?

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Is Google PageSpeed Just an Illusion?
For nearly 20 years, the industry has treated Google PageSpeed as a proxy for "website speed". Agencies sell it. Clients demand it. Developers optimize for it.

But here’s a simple question: Does PageSpeed actually measure speed? The real speed, not PageSpeed perceived speed!

What PageSpeed Measures - and What It Doesn’t
PageSpeed evaluates rendering milestones:
  • First Contentful Paint
  • Time to Interactive
  • Visual Stability
These are browser events. They describe when something becomes visible and interactive.

They measure perceived responsiveness.

They do not measure:
  • Backend execution time
  • Database performance
  • Server throughput
  • Total document generation time
The main document - the very foundation required before anything can render - is not evaluated as a performance metric.

So what exactly are we calling "speed"?

A Structural Mismatch
Consider two sites:

Site A:
Fast dedicated server. Minimal frontend optimization. Strong backend performance. Mediocre PageSpeed score.

Site B:
Slow shared hosting. Heavy backend logic. Aggressively optimized frontend assets. High PageSpeed score.
  • Which site is actually faster?
  • Which one handles load better?
  • Which one delivers the main document faster?
If those answers differ from the score, then the score is not measuring what most people think it measures.

The Narrative Effect
Since performance signals became part of ranking discussions, a belief emerged:

High score = Fast site.

But if the score reflects rendering smoothness rather than infrastructural speed, then we may have conflated two fundamentally different layers. Rendering optimization is not server performance. Visual stability is not backend efficiency. A smooth animation does not mean fast execution.

The Uncomfortable Scenario
Let’s push this one step further. What would happen if Google explicitly stated:

“PageSpeed score is not an indicator of actual load time or backend performance.”

  • Would agencies need to rethink how they sell optimization?
  • Would hosting companies need to explain performance differently?
  • Would SEO strategies shift?
  • Would thousands of case studies suddenly require reinterpretation?
Or would nothing change — because the narrative is already too deeply embedded?

Illusion or Misinterpretation?
  • So what is PageSpeed?
  • An illusion?
  • A misunderstood tool?
  • Or a system whose limitations were never clearly separated from its perceived meaning?
If, for nearly two decades, we have equated a rendering score with actual loading speed, and if that equation shaped decisions across agencies, hosting, and SEO - then this is not a minor misunderstanding.

It’s a structural one. And structural misunderstandings tend to last a very long time. Let’s discuss.

More uncomfortable truths?
https://www.cachecrawler.com/Blog:::42.html

or

Make WordPress Fast — Before the First Visit
https://www.cachecrawler.com/
 
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