


The Speed Kit Extension also helps you track the FMP for all your individual domains. Or you can activate Speed Kit for a particular domain and let it do the work for you. You can resolve your performance issues by implementing these hints yourself. In the details, you can find performance hints that briefly describe the possible optimizations, and how they affect performance.

The video shows how fast the current page load is (left) and how fast it could be (right) with optimizations. For each one, Speed Kit generates a performance report and captures the loading process on video.

So as soon as you install the extension, it analyzes all your Plesk websites. It comes with its own FMP measurement tool. Thankfully, extensions like Plesk’s new Speed Kit, can help you monitor and boost web performance in a couple of clicks. Can you track user-perceived performance? Since identifying the greatest visual change requires video analysis, you need a sophisticated tooling to measure FMP. We define FMP as the moment when one experiences the greatest visual change. Like, the headline and text in a blog, or the search bar and product overview in an e-shop. Moreover, the FMP captures how long it takes for the first important page elements to appear. The time until the First Meaningful Paint (FMP) is a performance metric that aims to quantify this subjective part of user experience. Or when the user can start interacting with the page. While those measurements help your engineers to perform diagnostics or low-level optimizations, they don’t tell you how fast your website feels to customers.īecause user-perceived performance depends on when the first relevant content is displayed. Typical web performance metrics relate to the Time To First Byte (TTFB), DomContentLoaded, or other technical aspects of the page load. Before you start optimizing your page loads, you first need to measure how fast they actually are.
