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How To Load Your Website In 2 Seconds?

The growing culture of impatience has made people less tolerant towards waiting. It has affected so much so that waiting a couple of extra seconds for a page to Load feels like an eternity.

People like fast websites and so does search engines.

Website load speeds are surprisingly important for SEO as they can make a huge difference in the ranking war.

According to Kissmetrics,

  • 7% of consumers expect a web page to load in 2 seconds or less.
  • 40% abandon websites that take more than 3 seconds to load.
  • 79% of shoppers who are a dissatisfied with website performance are less likely to buy from the same site again.
  • 52% of online shoppers state that quick page loading is important to their site loyalty.
  • As little as 1 second of delay decreases customer satisfaction by about 16% – every second count.
  • 44% of online shoppers will tell their friends about a bad experience online

Clearly, increasing the page speed of your website is critical, not only for ranking but, to increase user satisfaction.

Now, let’s jump in and Increase your website’s performance.

1. Reduce HTTP requests

Every single HTTP request adds more time to the loading speed of your website. Reducing the requests can be beneficial to your website as users needn’t wait long to see your website. By minimizing the requests, you can increase usage metrics, such as time spent on site and pages visited.

It is now possible to Reduce HTTP requests without destroying the design of your website.

  • Combine & inline your CSS scripts.
  • Minimize the number of
  • Limit the number of social buttons.
  • Use a content delivery network.
  • Convert images to Base64 code.
  • Minimize the usage of design and functional images.
  • Reduce the number of supportive files.

2. Improve server response time
It is recommended that you reduce your server response time to 200ms.

According to Google, these are the potential factors that may slow down your server response time.

  • Slow application logic.
  • Slow database queries.
  • Slow routing- frameworks, libraries, resource.
  • Memory starvation.

With the necessary data in hand, figure out how to address the problem. Once the issue is resolved, continue measuring your server response time so that you can quickly address future performance issues.

Note: Google’s PageSpeed Tools can give you more information related to performance related best-practices.

3. Enable gzip compression

Tuning the performance of your website is important. From a user perspective, reducing network transmission and bandwidth is also important. This is where Gzip Compression comes in.

A gzip compression can help to reduce the file size of web files like HTML, PHP, CSS, and Javascript. It can reduce them to about 30% or less than its original size before the files are sent to the browser of the user.

According to Yahoo, approximately 90% of today’s Internet traffic travels through browsers that claim to support gzip. So Gzipping generally reduces the sizes of pages by 70%.

Note: Use a gzip compression tool to see if compression is enabled.

4. Optimize images

In most of the websites, images are the main reason behind slow load time. If your website has a lot of high-quality images, it will take around 15 seconds or more to load.

Many of the images you use contain data that isn’t needed. So you can compress the images to make the file size small. Many people get scared of image compression because they think their images will look blocky and strange.

But, you can use image compression techniques called lossless compression which compresses images without degrading the quality.

5. Give importance to above the fold(ATF) content

When a website is loading, if content loads in a particular order, it is not good. Sometimes content at the bottom will load before the content at the top. This will lead to delay in content loading on top. This is known as above the fold.

So start using only one CSS stylesheet and no inline CSS.

6. Get a good hosting account

If you are not familiar with server design and architecture, it is not a problem. However, having a server set up properly is an important aspect of website speed.

Luckily, you just need a hosting account with a hosting company that knows what they are doing. $3 hosting per month will seem attractive. But, remember, you get what you pay for.

7. Give attention to main pages

A general rule of thumb to follow here is 80/20. Let’s say 80% of traffic is coming from 20% of your pages. They must load quickly to reduce bounce rates. A common way to optimize those pages is by optimizing code and images, removing excess content, and fixing un-optimized JavaScript.  

On your high traffic pages, you can load scripts asynchronously. It means that your main page structure and content loads before the script. For example, if you have an embedded YouTube video at the bottom of your page, you can load that script later. This way users can see the content on the top, and by the time they’ve read it, the video would have loaded.

8. Minimize redirects

Imagine if you go sit at a restaurant and then you’re told that there is no food and you have to go to another restaurant? Redirects are similar to that. They reduce your page load speed and it is a waste of time to go from one place to another.

Websites that have implemented a mobile SEO solution should pay attention to redirects on their pages. As more people use mobile to surf, redirects will become a big problem. It affects mobile users highly as they use a less reliable mobile network than desktop users.

Although there may be legitimate reasons for a redirect, they cause significant performance and speed issues.

When removing redirects,

  • Find redirects
  • Understand why they exist
  • Check how it affects or affected by other redirects
  • Remove if needed
  • Update if it is affected
  • If you have a secure site, use HTTP Strict Transport Security to remove SSL redirect

As users demand a rich experience, the size of pages will continue to grow. There will be fancy JavaScript, more CSS tricks, and third-party analytics to evaluate our site.

Remember, we must not let this bog us down.

Some of these tips are easy to implement. And others might be intimidating if you are not technically inclined. If that is the case, you have to get help from professional website developer to evaluate options and implement custom solutions.

Do you need help to improve your website performance?

Tell us about your goals and we will help you determine the best steps to achieve them.

The post How To Load Your Website In 2 Seconds? appeared first on ColorWhistle.



This post first appeared on Digital Marketing Services Company | White Label Online Marketing Agency, please read the originial post: here

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How To Load Your Website In 2 Seconds?

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