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8 Tips On Boosting Your Website Page Speed - Jain Technosoft

With a slow speed, you result in increased bounce rates, lower conversions, and hence, loss of revenue. Listed below are some effective ways in which you can improve page speed to implement change.

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8 Tips On Boosting Your Website Page Speed - Jain Technosoft

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  1. Even if you have the best information, an appealing design, relevant images, and a convenient layout, your visitors will be leaving you to run towards your competitors, if you have a slow page loading speed. Visitors aren’t going to wait for more than 3–5 seconds for your page to load; there’s an urgency all around! Thus, with a slow speed, you result in increased bounce rates, lower conversions, and hence, loss of revenue. Listed below are some effective ways in which you can improve page speed to implement change. 1. Leveraging browser caching When a visitor comes onto a site, the logo, images, background, styles, and every other asset on the site downloads to the visitor’s hard drive, and are stored there for a predetermined period of time. This means that the next time the visitor comes to the site, there is no need to download it again, which helps in loading the page faster, thus offering a better user experience. This caching of data is one of the best ways to speed up your site for your users. 2. Cleaning up your code Google relies on a lot of factors to determine a site’s ranking, one of them being crawlability — the ease at which it can access and crawl the content on a site. When your site is coded correctly, crawlability is quick. But, if there are errors in the code, everything becomes slow and difficult, making page speed significantly slow. If you have a long online history, your coding is probably outdated, inefficient, or filled with unintentional errors that accumulate over time. A thorough audit of your code helps you identify issues, and address them appropriately. 3. Compressing every possible asset If your website is packed with content, media, and other assets, it’ll reduce the page loading time, slowing down your site. Compressing these assets will lessen the burden on both your servers and users. Doing so can also drastically decrease the upload time for HTML, CSS, and JavaScript files, thus making page speed faster. 4. Getting a Content Delivery Network

  2. When using a Content Delivery Network, a group of geographically distributed servers will work together to quickly deliver sire content, reducing both load time as well as bandwidth consumption. Although it decreases the amount of information the server must provide, it provides only necessary information, while also boosting the speed. 5. Avoiding landing page redirects When a visitor is ushered through a landing page redirect, the server needs to provide additional data, which increases page load times. However, redirects are necessary too, at times. This means that you should use redirects, but sparingly. You must save your redirects for times when you need to address a faulty or incorrect URL. But, make sure to use the correct redirect, avoid redirect chains, and use responsive layouts. 6. Using lazy loading If you have too much content on your site, lazy loading can prove to be a game- changer! Lazy loading can help users see parts of a website within a wink of an eye, with more content and images loading slowly and gradually below the fold. This means visitors won’t have to wait for the entire website to load; they’ll keep seeing parts of the content as they unfold, keeping their eyes busy, and thus reducing bounce rates. 7. Improving server response time Reducing the load on your server, but without compromising on user experience, can help boost page speed by a great extent. There is a lot of weightlifting that your site server does, which you can reduce to help your server to handle the tasks better and quicker, giving users the experience they want at the speed they expect. One way to do this is by using a static page cache on the server, which will prevent the server from having to go through all the computational work to serve a page. Another way is to ensure that your web hosting provider’s server allows for a persistent opcode cache. 8. Using the right themes and plugins There are certain themes and plugins that can create significant page lag. It may be because they may be outdated, poorly crafted, or not compatible with your site. Closely monitor page speed to quickly identify any issues before they lead to

  3. increased bounce rates. Use themes and plugins from a reputable source, and make sure you’re using the latest version, keeping the usage to a minimum. Conclusion Using all these tips, you can certainly have a quick-loading website, which can prove better for your SEO efforts and outcomes. For better practices, you can partner with a professional SEO company in India, who can use every possible white-hat technique to benefit your website and boost its ranking on SERPs. For more information, visit: https://www.jaintechnosoft.com/

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