A website’s page load time plays an important role in customer acquisition. Google states that if your website takes more than 3 seconds to load, over half of the visitors will leave it. Eventually, it leads to conversion and profits. Although there are online tools available to check your website loading time and performance (Lighthouse, for instance), it’s important to understand what affects your website’s page load time. You can then optimize your web page accordingly.
Today, no one would like to wait for a website to spin and load at its speed. Websites that load quickly perform more in user engagement, conversion rates, and user experience. Hence, it is very important to have a high-availability web hosting plans.
The page speed always depends on the size of the assets loaded on the browser. It is, therefore, good to have an optimum number of assets with the least possible file size. This will require lesser bandwidth.
Greater the number of HTTP requests from a browser to server/server to server, the higher will be the bandwidth consumption. Therefore, keep the number of HTTP requests to the minimum possible.
Using CDN will boost the performance of the web site. The absence of it will affect the load time. CDN is a content delivery/distribution network. It is a network of proxy servers and their data centres distributed across the globe to increase the performance and availability of services to the end-users.
Bad coding will always affect the page performance and SEO ranking of the website. It is good to follow best practices starting from the initial stage of development.
The number of redirections impacts the DNS lookup time.
If you’re using HTTP/1.0 protocol and have not configured Keep-Alive, then there’s a higher possibility that the browser to server connection will break. It will not load the page properly.
Sourcing page content from other sites might affect the load time and performance of your website.
You might also like to read about 11 proven techniques to optimize website performance.
You can implement either bottom-up or top-down strategy for website optimization (discussed later). However, website optimization is an iterative process and you can repeat the following loop after completing a cycle.
This strategy starts from planning to production (Proactive). It defines a set of rules and actions before/while starting the actual development.
The above infographic represents the lifecycle of Bottom-Up strategy in web page optimization.
It is a reactive method, which analyses the existing process to find the issue/lag, then reworks on behavioural grounds to accomplish the target. It is a reverse engineering process to identify the performance-issue gap and methods to fix them.
You can identify the resources which are affecting in maximum page load by considering the following-
Once you’ve identified the sources, lay down the process of optimizing the content and keep iterating to achieve the desired results.
Consider the following aspects during the design and development phase.
Below are few improvisation observations which are affected by optimizing the Webpage and it’s assets.
We’re technology tinkerers, experimentalists, and experts in customer experience consulting. Get in touch with us at hello@mantralabsglobal.com to know more about our ventures in website design and experience consulting.
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