Keep important pages fast.

Screpy helps you monitor page speed, catch slowdowns, and understand which pages need performance work after launches, redesigns, and content updates.

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PageSpeed Monitoring

Track speed before it costs traffic.

Screpy keeps speed checks close to your SEO workflow, so slow pages and heavy assets are easier to find, explain, and improve.

Page speed

Monitor slow pages.

Track important pages over time and see when performance starts moving in the wrong direction.

Speed regressions

Catch sudden slowdowns.

Notice when releases, scripts, design changes, or content updates make a page slower.

Heavy assets

Find oversized files.

Spot images, media, and other assets that add weight and delay important content.

Loading experience

Review render delays.

Understand when users may wait too long for meaningful page content to appear.

Technical context

Connect speed and page data.

Review slow pages alongside crawl, metadata, and audit signals to understand what needs cleanup.

Page analysis

Review affected URLs.

See which pages have performance issues and keep the surrounding SEO details close at hand.

Priority

Focus on key pages.

Prioritize pages where slow loading can affect campaigns, conversions, or important organic traffic.

Continuous checks

Monitor after changes.

Keep checking speed after launches, migrations, template changes, and new content goes live.

Core Web Vitals context

Link speed to UX signals.

Review page speed near loading, responsiveness, and stability signals when user experience needs attention.

SEO context

Compare with visibility.

Look at performance changes next to ranking and page health signals for important search pages.

Speed reports

Share performance updates.

Turn speed checks and page changes into readable reports for teams, clients, and stakeholders.

Exports

Work with speed data.

Export performance findings when your team needs spreadsheets for tracking and cleanup workflows.

How it works

How PageSpeed monitoring works.

Choose important pages, track speed over time, then fix the slowdowns that matter most.

Choose pages

Select the landing pages, product pages, content pages, and templates your team wants to monitor.

Track speed

Screpy checks page speed signals and keeps performance changes visible over time.

Find slowdowns

Review pages that became slower after releases, scripts, images, or design changes.

Share progress

Report performance improvements and open issues so the next fixes are easier to plan.

Trust signals

Built for SEO decisions that need evidence.

Screpy keeps technical findings, page context, and reporting workflows close together so teams can explain why an issue matters before they decide what to fix.

Methodology

Checks are tied to real SEO work.

Crawling, page metadata, links, images, performance, uptime, and rank signals are grouped around practical review steps instead of a single black-box score.

Expert context

Priorities still leave room for judgment.

Audit findings are framed around page value, search intent, and business impact so marketers, developers, and agencies can decide what deserves attention first.

Transparency

Findings are made easier to share.

Reports, exports, and recurring checks help teams compare what changed, explain progress, and keep clients or stakeholders aligned on the same evidence.

FAQ

PageSpeed monitoring questions.

A focused overview of how PageSpeed monitoring helps teams catch slow pages and keep performance work connected to SEO priorities.

Why did my PageSpeed score drop?

Page speed can drop because of larger images, new scripts, third-party tags, layout changes, heavier content, hosting problems, or release changes. Monitoring helps identify when the change happened.

Which pages should I monitor first?

Start with pages tied to revenue, signups, ads, organic traffic, product discovery, and campaigns. Slow high-value pages usually matter more than slow low-traffic pages.

Should I fix every speed issue Screpy finds?

No. Prioritize issues that affect important pages, large assets, rendering, user experience, and recurring performance problems. Some warnings matter less than others.

Can Screpy help after a redesign or new script?

Yes. Screpy helps teams keep speed visible after launches, redesigns, migrations, new scripts, content edits, and technical updates.