Actually I believe RAM speed is an important metric.
I suppose. Pushing 3600MHz (especially on Ryzen) would be better than 2400, doing CL16 is better than CL-whatever, there's all sorts of fun (and !!FUN!!, considering how much you'll probably crash) to be had there. Problem is, that's basically reserved for desktop and very-high-end gaming laptops. I doubt OP happens to have that.
There is a hardware upgrade that would give you some performance uplift, assuming your CPU can even run dual-channel RAM and the laptop itself has 2 RAM slots: upgrading the RAM to dual-channel. Put in two identical sticks of RAM, and assuming it's supported, you'll get an improvement to performance. I would suggest using CPU-Z to check, assuming you're running Windows. I got a 20% improvement on my laptop. I'm not quite sure if it was worth it. I did it mostly to end up with 16GB of RAM, but it was fun to see some extra speed from this thing.
Of course, dual-channel RAM only speeds DF up if your CPU is fast enough to benefit from it. I had this crappy laptop, it had some crap pre-Ryzen AMD APU (off topic, but: don't get one ever. Ryzen is so much better. If the CPU name starts with "A-" or "E-", and it's an AMD, stay the hell away from it.), and even though it ran 1866 MHz RAM, it was far slower than my computer at the time, whose RAM ran at 1600MHz. RAM speed is nice, but if it's bottlenecked by the CPU, you're not gonna gain anything from it.