A slow website loses visitors and rankings. A better host, fewer JavaScript and CSS files, properly sized images and a few technical tweaks can transform load time. We have done this for many sites, and took one home page from 9 seconds down to 4.6, which matters even more when the visitor is on a phone.
Get a faster web host
One of the biggest reasons a site is slow is a weak hosting company. The provider may run an under-rated server and pack many domains onto it, leaving it under stress. It costs a little more, but working with a good, business-class host is worth it, because everything else you do sits on top of that server.
Improve the page design
If your site uses a lot of JavaScript and CSS files, it will be slow, because each one takes time for the browser to download and interpret. Reduce the number of these files and optimise them where you can. Leaner pages load faster on every device.
Size your images properly
Many designers upload large image files shot on a high-resolution camera, far bigger than a user's phone or laptop needs. Reducing the pixel dimensions cuts the file size, and reducing the resolution cuts it further without hurting the visual quality. Combine the two and the image downloads and appears much faster.
Apply the technical tweaks
Several smaller adjustments add up: pre-connecting to third-party servers such as Google Analytics, and reordering the file sequence so the important things load first. We have improved loading speed for many sites and seen a tangible lift in rankings and response rate alongside it. Speed is a conversion lever, which is why we treat Core Web Vitals as revenue, not an SEO checkbox.
Make your site load fast
If your site drags, we can find what is slowing it and fix it, then show you the before-and-after so you know the gain is real.
Get a website speed reviewQuestions owners ask about speed
What is the first thing that makes a website slow?
Often the web host. An under-powered server loaded with many domains is stretched thin. Moving to a good, business-class host frequently delivers the first big speed gain.
How much can images slow a site down?
A lot. Designers often upload full-resolution photos that are far larger than a phone or laptop needs. Reducing the pixel dimensions and the resolution together shrinks the file size sharply without hurting how it looks.
Does faster loading actually help rankings?
Yes. We have sped up many sites and seen tangible gains in rankings and response rate. One home page that loaded in 9 seconds now loads in 4.6, and the effect matters even more on mobile.
Can you speed up my site?
Yes. We work through the host, the code, the images and the technical settings, then measure the before and after so the improvement is real, not guessed.