Visitors are impatient. Research consistently shows that a large proportion of people abandon a website if it takes more than three seconds to load. In online business, speed is not a technical detail. It’s a commercial one.
1. What Causes a Slow Website?
Common culprits are often invisible to the owner:
- Uncompressed images that are far larger than they need to be
- Too many plugins, especially on WordPress sites
- A cheap hosting plan that can’t handle even moderate traffic
- Outdated page builders loading unnecessary code
You don’t need to diagnose these yourself. Google’s free PageSpeed Insights tool will flag the main issues for any website in seconds.
2. Images Are Usually the Biggest Problem
A photo taken on a modern phone can be several megabytes in size. Online, that’s enormous:
- Resize images to the actual dimensions they’ll be displayed at before uploading
- Use a tool like Squoosh, TinyPNG, or ShortPixel to compress them
- Consider modern formats like WebP, which are significantly smaller than JPEGs
Compressing your images alone can halve your load time in some cases.
3. Your Hosting Matters More Than You Think
Budget hosting is tempting, but it has real costs:
- Shared servers with hundreds of other websites are slow under load
- Moving to a better quality host is often the single biggest improvement you can make
- Look for hosting with servers based in the UK if your audience is primarily British
Speed is largely infrastructure. Invest in it appropriately.
4. Speed Affects Your Google Ranking
Google uses page speed as a ranking factor:
- A faster site is more likely to appear higher in search results
- It also reduces “bounce rate” since visitors stay rather than leave in frustration
- Both effects compound over time
Conclusion
Speeding up your website is one of the highest-return improvements you can make. It costs relatively little, can often be done quickly, and the benefits for both user experience and search visibility are immediate and lasting.