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Does your company website take more than three seconds to load? It could be stopping sales

Slow and sluggish websites can cost businesses big time, and SMEs are urged to keep load times at under three seconds if they want to make sure customers stay online to complete a purchase. The State of Online Retail report from cloud services provider Akamai has highlighted the importance of websites loading quickly, with the […]
Dominic Powell
Dominic Powell
online marketing

Slow and sluggish websites can cost businesses big time, and SMEs are urged to keep load times at under three seconds if they want to make sure customers stay online to complete a purchase.

The State of Online Retail report from cloud services provider Akamai has highlighted the importance of websites loading quickly, with the โ€œsweet spotโ€ being at 2.4 seconds.

Traffic for websitesย that loaded at a slower rateย than that suffered significantly, withย nearly 30% of customers found to not return to slow websites. Additionally, just a two-second increase in load times led to customers spending 50% less time on a webpage.

Read more: Kogan beats The Iconic and David Jones as best mobile site in Australia as half-year revenue tops $140 million

SEO expert and chief executive at StewArt Media Jim Stewart believes a number of small business owners donโ€™t realise how much of a โ€œpain pointโ€ slow loading websites are.

โ€œBack in 2004 Google found just half a second of extra load time leads to a 20% decrease in conversion rates, and itโ€™s only been increasing since then,โ€ Stewart tellsย SmartCompany.

โ€œThese days theyโ€™ve found 60% of customers will abandon a page if it takes three seconds to load.โ€

Akamaiโ€™s report shows even more alarming figures than that, with bounce rates for mobile users hitting 102% with a load rate slowdown of just two seconds.

A websiteโ€™s bounce rate indicates the number of users who navigate away from the website after just viewing one page.

โ€œBusiness owners should know if your website loads slowly, youโ€™re going to get less traffic, less conversions, and Google will hold your site down in search rankings,โ€ says Stewart.

Keep your website up to speed

Stewart compares managing load times to โ€œtuning a race carโ€, noting the large number of components that can make the difference between snappy and sluggish.

But tuning these components isย essential, as Akamaiโ€™s report revealed a slowdown of just 100 milliseconds causing a 7.1% drop in conversion rates for mobile users.

Mobile users expectย websites to load fast, with the report showing higher bounce rates on mobile. Stewart believes SMEs need to think โ€œmobile firstโ€ when it comes to website load times, noting this is an area that’s commonly overlooked.

โ€œWeโ€™re in a mobile-first world now, so you need to look at your mobile site. Websites might be loading big display banners on mobile when they donโ€™t really need to,โ€ he says.

As for other ways businesses can fix up their websiteโ€™s load times, Stewart advises using Googleโ€™s PageSpeed Insights to find out where a webpage is lacking.

โ€œIt will give you a ranking out of 100, and you really need to be in the 80s or higher. I guarantee most businesses will be surprised of what Google thinks of their website,โ€ he says.

Some common issues that cause slow websites include the loading of high-quality images, and background scripts loading before the page visuals render.

โ€œBy not loading those scripts in the background, your page will take longer to appear. In this world we live in, we need to give users the information they need as quickly as we possibly can,โ€ he says.

Another tip, says Stewart, is to keep file sizes as small as possible.

โ€œAlso try to host your site servers as close to your users as possible. If youโ€™re an Australian website, make sure your content distribution servers are based here,โ€ he says.

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