Site Speed
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I was wondering what benefits there are to investing the time and money into speeding up an eCommerce site. We are currently averaging 3.4 seconds of load time per page and I know from webmaster tools they hold the mark to be at closer to 1.5 seconds. Is it worth it to get to 1.5 seconds? Any tips for doing this?
Thanks
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@JustDucky We recently migrated to a data center and the average loading time dropped from ~4 seconds to ~0.9. I to noticed only 1-2% drop in bounce rate. It seems only that many people were turned off by the loading times. Then again 1-2% can be anything.
@John O'Haver I would invest the time simply because ~3.4 is the average value. This means that sometimes it goes up to 10 or even more. Take a look at your analytics account and see the performance per country. Also, I've been benchmarking analytics with remote monitoring solutions and I find a discrepancy of about 30% (probably due to limited sample date from analytics). I don't want to advertise any available solutions, but trying one won't hurt. You may find your times to be better (I hope).
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Cypra correctly points out that faster sites make for a better user experience and Alan pointed out how inexpensive CDN can be. I installed CDN on a site that already uses WP3TC. Page load speeds cut in half but the bounce rate (which is very high) dropped by only 1 or 2%.
Has anyone who has multiple sites sampled their bounce rates before and after they installed CDN?
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As Doug just said, there is a strong correlation between Page speed and user experience, when a user needs to wait for a page or something to load before getting the information, there is a higher bounce rate. Since the bounce rate is a strong indicator of user satisfaction that will sooner or later be implemented in algorithmic factors, it's good to adress it right from the conception phase.
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It's not just the search engines you need to consider. Is the speed of your site affecting user experience? Are people giving up because it's just too slow? How many abandoned sessions are you getting? Do you have any opportunity to get feedback from your users?
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Matt Cutts has said that you need to be pretty slow to incure a penalty, less than 1% of sites fall into this category.
It all depends on what is taking so long. is it download, is it slow code, is it the server?
if downloads is the problem, i would look into using a content delevery system CDN, in short hosting your images and static files in the cloud, I use Microsoft Azure Cloud services This will cost you very little in money, could be as little as a $1 a month.
You can also use this tool from google to get suggestions, but using a cdn would be the best gain.
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