It’s more than just bravado or bragging rights. e-commerce loading speeds have a direct impact on e-commerce KPIs, and ultimately revenue. As a rule of thumb, the slower your website is, the higher your bounce rate is and the lower your conversion rate is.
Furthermore, tech giants like Google use speed as a ranking factor. This has been publicized a lot since Google announced the release of Core Web Vitals. This set of tests quickly and easily verifies if webpages within your website are user-friendly, or if they’re slow and hard for consumers to use.
So, speeding up your web pages can give your SEO campaigns an extra edge. They can also help your Google Ads quality scores, which impact the success of your SEM campaigns.
Google has gone so far as to create a calculator to help you understand the value of speeding up your website:
Source: https://www.thinkwithgoogle.com/feature/testmysite/
At the heart of it, your Magento site consists of files and a database that are hosted on one or more web servers. If your coding is optimized, and your servers are configured with speed in mind, you can expect some pretty great results. What to consider:
Many store owners start by reviewing all of the extensions that they’ve added to their stores and removing any that are no longer valuable. Having excess code running certainly has the propensity to bog down page loading speeds.
Another common task is to review your coding and database for errors or issues which are impacting your website’s speed and availability. While you can start with your Magento error and exception logs and external speed tests like GTMetrix, many developers leverage more advanced tools like New Relic, which help to identify scripts that are causing issues and bottlenecks. These issues will often impact the performance of your site, and can also hurt the scalability of your website. In essence, inefficient code and excess unused extensions will cause bottlenecks, overutilize server resources, and muck up your website’s performance.
Perhaps the biggest coding factor that impacts the loading of your Magento website will be the frontend theme. Many Magento 2 sites use Luma or a variation of this theme, which launched with Magento 2 back in 2015. Luma is technologically outdated and can make it hard, if not impossible, to hit the speed and core web vitals scores that you’re seeking. As a result, many merchants are switching to more modern themes, like Hyva, which are engineered around new standards and best practices.
Lots of companies advertise offers of fast Magento hosting. However, they rarely live up to their hype. There are several things that your web host should assist with in order to deliver the super-fast loading speeds that you’re seeking, such as:
One core difference between hosting providers is management and support. Many hosts that offer Magento environments will simply spin up a prefabricated environment and hand it off to you so that you can try to meet your goals with it.
Here are some signs that the host you’re considering is indeed ready to help you hit your speed goals:
Finding the right hosting partner can alleviate many Magento performance and reliability issues.
Just because there are elements of your website that you haven’t been able to optimize in the past, doesn’t mean that you won’t be able to as you move forward. Here are some examples:
While your content delivery network (CDN) may include basic image optimization, there are solution providers like ImageEngine that focus on nothing but image optimization, and can potentially provide significantly better loading speeds for images.
Content delivery networks excel at caching copies of static files, like images, that don’t change frequently. However, there’s still lots of dynamic content that needs to be transmitted from your hosting servers each time a visitor navigates to your website. There are, however, solution providers like Zycada which can use bots to cache dynamic content at the edge too.
Your Magento store is probably connected with a variety of 3rd party apps. These may be related to online ratings and reviews, loyalty programs, live chat platforms, marketing enhancements, shipping offers, or various other solutions. When you select such platforms, you’re probably not thinking about speed impacts - but it would be ideal if you were. Solution providers like Yottaa help you to analyze and control 3rd party apps that load with your website.
When you run a speed test using Google’s Lighthouse tool, you may notice a warning asking you to run the tool from an incognito browser window. That’s because extensions installed in your web browser will impact loading speeds. Historically, this is something that website owners simply had to live with, but there are now providers like Namogoo that allow you to split test blocking different extensions, and ultimately block the ones that are negatively impacting your eCommerce conversions and revenue.
In many cases, your web host will have partners to recommend to address areas of concern like Image Optimization and Caching Dynamic Content, greatly simplifying your rollout of such solutions.
Here’s where you’d expect most articles to sum things up talking about products or services. However, that’s not typically what moves the needle the most. Magento loading speeds are highly influenced and impacted by 3 parties:
(1) You, as the owners of the Magento store,
(2) Your web developer(s), and
(3) The team that’s proactively managing your Magento web hosting round-the-clock.
At the beginning of this article, we mentioned that speeding up your Magento store doesn’t need to be stressful. Indeed, if these 3 parties are communicating effectively and working as a team, your Magento loading speeds should be good if not phenomenal.
Regardless of what website platform you’re using, latency and speed issues require more than tools to resolve. They require expertise. However, when you bring Magento Open Source or Adobe Commerce into the mix, it’s crucial to have experienced industry veterans helping to manage the fine-tuning of your site.
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