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Tag Archives: web hosting tips
The Ultimate Guide to Building a Successful Website
The post The Ultimate Guide to Building a Successful Website appeared first on HostGator Blog . You’ve got an idea for a web property – whether it’s for a business, to share your thoughts and ideas with the world, or to simply find and connect with other people who share your passions. The challenge now is to build your website . If you don’t know anything about web design or HTML, then building a website can seem like a daunting prospect. But getting all the elements of a successful website into place is just a matter of knowing the right steps to take and tools to use. This guide will cover all the main things you need to know to get started. Step 1: Determine Your Website Goals. You’re starting a website for a reason. What is it you want the site to accomplish? Before you actually start working on the website itself, sit down and really work out what you want your website to achieve. If it’s a business website, your main goal will be increasing your business profits, but you’ll want to break that down into more specific and transitional goals as well, such as raising brand awareness or driving traffic into your store. If you’re hoping to write blog posts about what you love and eventually monetize your blog , then your goals will be based on driving traffic and building a community. Even if you just want to use your website to put your thoughts out into the world or share your creative projects, you probably want other people to find and connect with them. Successful website design depends on what you want to get out of the website. Whether you want visitors, sales, subscribers, fame, community, or something entirely different, you have to start by clearly defining and writing out your website goals. Step 2: Pick a Domain and Hosting Provider. While you can take each of these steps separately, they’re lumped together here for a reason. Most hosting providers include a domain name (or multiple) in the cost of hosting, so you can save yourself some money by registering a domain through the hosting provider you go with. Picking Your Domain Name Choosing the right domain name can be challenging. You need to pick something that makes sense for your websites, is easy for your visitors to remember, but that’s still available. With millions of websites already out there, a lot of your options are already taken – especially if you want to use a .com option, which is recommended since it’s what your visitors will automatically type in when looking for you. If you have a business name already, you’ll ideally want to come up with a domain that matches it or is at least similar. If you’re still figuring out what to call your brand or blog, then you have some more room to get creative here. Brainstorm different keywords and concepts that you like and that are relevant to what you’ll be offering on the site. Put together different combinations of terms that you like the sound of and check the availability with HostGator’s domain name search until you find an option you like that’s available. Some domain registrars, including HostGator, allow you to bundle your domain purchase with your hosting plan. Let’s review how to choose a hosting plan next. Choosing Your Web Hosting Plan When you start looking at , you may find it all overwhelming at first. The main things you need to cross off your web hosting checklist are: Does the provider have a reliable server? Research a web hosting provider’s uptime to make sure you pick one you can be confident will keep your website consistently active. Can the plan handle your traffic? Unless you have an established brand, your website probably won’t get that much traffic to start. But you want to make sure you choose a plan that can handle the amount you plan on getting. Is the plan compatible with your web design needs? If your website will be on the simpler side, then you don’t have much to worry about here, but if you have a developer that insists on using a specific type of programming language or software, you may need to choose your web hosting plan based on compatibility. A good web hosting provider will have salespeople that can help you navigate the differences between the various plans they offer and customer support that will help you learn the ropes when getting your website set up. If you’re considering HostGator for your provider, our staff can help with any questions you have and most of our plans come with at least one domain name included. Step 3: Plan Out Your Site Organization. A successful website design requires proper organization. You need the website to be intuitive to users. And if you care about being easy to find, you also need it to be organized well for SEO . Before you work on the website design itself, sit down to figure out the main pages and categories your website will have. The most important pages should go in your main menu, which should be included on every page so it’s easy for visitors to navigate to the most important parts of the site. If your website will just have a few main pages and be pretty basic, figuring out your site organization won’t be too difficult. But if you’ll have a bigger site with a lot of different pages, categories, and subcategories, then it’s even more important to get a plan into place for how it will all be organized now. Think first and foremost when planning out your site’s organization about your future visitors. What are the categories that will make the most sense to them? What site structure will make it easiest for them to find what they’re looking for? You’ll be doing some guesswork at this point (and your analytics after you launch will show you if you got it right or need to make changes later), but do your best to put yourself in their shoes now. Step 4: Develop a Successful Website Design. Once you know the main pages you’ll be creating and the way you’ll be organizing the site, it’s time to design your website. If you’re not adept at web design yourself, you have two main options here: Using a website builder Hiring a professional web designer Option 1: Using a Website Builder You don’t have to learn coding to build a success website anymore. Now you can turn to website builders that make creating a website on your own much easier. Website builders usually offer a number of templates you can choose from to start with and let you make tweaks to personalize the site from there. You can load your own images and copy, easily change out colors, and drag and drop images and other page elements to where you want them on the page. For someone without coding skills that has a limited budget, sticking with a website builder is worth it to keep things easy, while still producing a website that looks good. And if you chose HostGator to be your web hosting provider in step two, we offer a free website builder with many of our web hosting plans, so you won’t have to spend any additional money to get started. Here are just a few of the websites designed using our free templates: Option 2: Using a Professional Designer For more complicated websites, a website builder may not cut it. If your website will have a lot of pages, include a difficult-to-build feature like creating a forum , or if you have a really specific vision in mind – then you’ll be better off hiring a professional to design your website for you. Research the design firms and freelance web designers in your area and set up interviews with anyone whose style you like. In each interview, make sure you discuss your main goals for the website and clearly describe what you’re looking for. Pay attention to the questions they ask you and the tips or suggestions they provide – that’s how you’ll get a feel for their level of knowledge and whether they’re a good fit. Developing a successful website design with the right professional will ultimately be a collaborative effort, and finding the right person to hire is the most important step of that process. Step 5: Write Your Website Copy. The design’s important, but one of the other crucial elements of a successful website is good copy. Website copywriting is a skill set in and of itself and, especially for business websites, the words you choose will make a big difference in how successful your website is at achieving your goals. For many websites, your best bet at this step is to hire a professional copywriter who knows what kind of writing works well on the web and can help you clarify your business positioning and messaging so that it resonates with your target audience. If your website is more of a passion project than a business website with a profit goal, then it might not make as much sense to spend money on a professional copywriter. If you’ll be writing your website copy yourself though, take some time to read up on web copywriting best practices . Step 6: Optimize for SEO. If you want people to find your website, then you need to be thinking about how to design your website for search engines as well as people (although people should always take priority!). That means learning the basics of SEO and optimizing each of the pages on your website before you publish it. Search engine optimization is a big topic, but to give you the short version, it includes: Performing keyword research to learn the terms your audience is using (and how competitive they are) Including relevant keywords in your URL structure , title tags , headings, image meta tags , and copy. Adding meta descriptions for every page on your website. Including natural internal links on your web pages using relevant keywords in the anchor text. Start doing this before your website goes up on the web and keep doing it for every new page you add over time. Step 7: Plan for Marketing. A successful website doesn’t start and stop with a good design. You also have to plan on taking steps to promote your website. SEO is one part of that, but you may also want to consider using tactics like paid advertising, social media marketing, and content marketing to get users to your website. New websites often need an extra push to get those first visitors. If gaining an audience is important for you to meet your website goals, then you’ll benefit from creating a marketing plan even before your website launches. Step 8: Review All Pages for Any Errors. With your web design and website copy in place, you’re so close! Now you just need to make sure everything looks good before you actually put your website out on the wide web. Take time to read over every page and look for any errors. Make sure all your links point to the right place and all the information is accurate. Check how it looks on mobile devices and in different web browsers. This is a good phase to bring in some outside eyes. Have a friend go through the website as well to see if they find it intuitive and everything looks good to them too. You’re so close to it that someone else will have an easier time spotting usability issues than you will. Step 9: Launch! Once you’re pretty confident that everything looks good and you have exactly the website you want, publish it to the web. Make sure to set up a Google Analytics account and add the tracking code to your website at this point (or before) to help with our last step. Step 10: Monitor Your Site. No matter how hard you try, you won’t come up with the perfect website design on the first try. To fully understand what works on your website with your audience, you’ll have to wait and see what they do once your website is out in the world. Pay attention to your analytics and use the data to find opportunities to improve your website’s design, your copy, and the marketing tactics you use over time. A successful website is only a little bit about what you do when you’re building it (although all that matters!). It’s much more about what you do after it has launched. Make sure you build the best website you can, but also have a plan for what to do beyond launch day to achieve success. 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Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged design, domain, gator-website, goals, hosting, search-engines, social-media, traffic, web hosting, web hosting tips, your-website
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Selling Products on a Website: A Helpful Guide
The post Selling Products on a Website: A Helpful Guide appeared first on HostGator Blog . The way people shop today has largely moved online. Any business that sells products from a storefront now will benefit from selling products on a website as well. Selling through an online store is an easy way to increase your market and get more sales from customers who value convenience. And anyone starting a new business can save on upfront costs and work by making it an eCommerce store. The costs of building a website are much lower than what you’d spend to rent space and staff a physical store. Selling products online is a much easier and more affordable way to start down the path of entrepreneurship. Why You Should Sell Products On a Website For people to buy your items, they have to be able to access them. When you only sell them in one location (or even if you have a chain of specific locations), you’re limited to selling products to the people who are willing and able to come to you. That means there’s a huge market you miss out on. If you’ve been hesitant to do the work of building an eCommerce website to sell products, there are a few good reasons to move it up on your to-do list. 1. People spend money online. In 2017, people spent over $450 billion making purchases online and that number has been growing over the last few years. Any business owner that stays offline is missing out on their piece of those profits. While some shoppers certainly still make a routine out of heading to their local shopping district or mall, many now skip the trip and do a lot of their buying while sitting at home. If your competitors make their items available to them there and you don’t, you’ll lose that business. 2. An eCommerce website costs less than a storefront. Running a storefront requires paying: Rent for the space The paychecks of enough staff to be there during business hours Proper licensing and permits Utility bills Furniture and decorations Building maintenance Cleaning supplies Selling supplies like POS systems and cash registers All of that adds up to a lot of expenses – and most of them are ongoing. Selling products on a website, on the other hand, cuts out most of those costs. You will still need to pay for things like web hosting and marketing and may need to hire some staff, depending on the size of the eCommerce store you run, but the costs are overall more manageable and easy to plan for. 3. Online shopping provides convenience. When you’re tired, busy, sick, or just feeling a little lazy – you probably don’t want to spend time driving somewhere and browsing a store for the items you want to buy. People have a lot going on and sometimes there just isn’t room in their lives for a trip to the store. By comparison, browsing an eCommerce site online and making selections is easier, faster, and requires a lot less energy. People are more likely to spend their money when it doesn’t feel like work to do so. Online shopping isn’t 100% effortless – but it’s pretty close. When you sell your products through an online store, you remove a lot of the barriers to buying that exist with a physical store. 4. An online presence gets your products found in search. 85% of people turn to Google for product discovery and shopping. Without an eCommerce website, your products have no chance of showing up when potential customers start looking for what you sell online. But when every product you sell is listed on a page on your eCommerce site, all of them will be indexed by Google. That’s the first step to your products showing up in search results. If you want those product pages to show up on the first page of Google, that requires an investment in SEO best practices . But before you can even start thinking about that, you need an ecommerce website for your products. 5. The growth in mobile means people can buy from anywhere. Mobile shopping trends show that almost a third of all shopping people now do online is on mobile devices. Mobile shopping makes it possible for people to make purchases at the exact moment they decide they want something. Whether they’re at a dinner party, strolling through the park, or lounging on the beach – if they think of something they want, they can make the purchase right then. That creates more opportunities for sales. You don’t face the risk of a potential customer deciding they want an item you sell, only to forget about it by the time they get home to their computer. That’s good for your customers, and it’s good for your bottom line. How to Sell Products on a Website The reasons to start selling your products online should be clear at this point. If you’re convinced, here are the main features you need for an ecommerce site . 1. Choose your website hosting. For your website to live on the web, you need hosting. One of your first steps is therefore to research what type of web hosting you need and select the right plan and web hosting provider . Be sure to look for a provider that can support ecommerce options. You want a web hosting plan that provides the level of security you need to accept purchases. And it must be compatible with ecommerce software that supplies shopping cart and checkout functionality. 2. Pick and register your domain name. Your domain name is essentially your address on the web – it’s what people type in to reach your website. You want it to be something easy to remember that people will immediately know to associate with your business. If possible, a domain name that includes popular keywords people use when searching for your products is a nice plus since it helps with SEO. But that’s a lower priority than making sure it’s intuitive and clearly connected to your brand. Unless your business already has a unique name, the hardest part of this step will likely be finding a domain name that works and is available. A lot of options will already be taken – especially the .com options. Before you settle in on an idea, check the domain availability . You may have to do a little bit of brainstorming and searching before you find a domain that’s the right fit for your business. 3. Design your ecommerce website. Your website needs to look professional and have a design that guides your visitors toward making a purchase. You have a couple of options here: You can hire a professional designer. You can build it yourself. Hiring a designer will come with a bigger price tag and may not be necessary, even if your web design skills are limited (or nonexistent). But an intuitive website builder allows even beginners to become designers. You can work from pre-created templates that are optimized for search and mobile, and use a drag-and-drop editor to make changes to the design without knowing anything about coding. Make sure if you use a website builder that you choose one that makes it easy to include shopping features on your website. And definitely choose one that offers responsive website templates that work well on mobile. With how common mobile shopping is today, you don’t want to miss out on the consumers who prefer to make purchases from their mobile devices. 4. Get your SSL certificate. How many news stories have you seen about business data breaches? By now, most consumers have learned to take basic precautions when handing sensitive information over to a business. The main thing every conscious online shopper knows to look for is the little lock icon and https that show up in the browser when you’re on a secure website. As small and simple as it is, this lets your visitors know that they can safely provide their credit card information to you without it becoming easily accessible to hackers. Many consumers won’t consider buying anything from your website if you don’t have this as a way to secure a website from hackers . And as a business owner, it’s your responsibility to take this basic step to keep your customer’s data secure. As an added benefit, Google has a preference for https sites. Getting your SSL certificate will not only make you more trustworthy to your visitors, but also help your SEO efforts by increasing your authority in the eyes of the search engines. Some web hosting plans include a free SSL certificate , so this may be a step you can knock out at the same time as signing up for a hosting plan. 5. Set up a merchant account. To sell products online, you need a way to accept payments. A merchant account is a business bank account that enables the processing of credit card payments. Any merchant account you create will charge fees for the payments you process, but the specific fee structures they offer vary. In most cases, you can expect to pay a fee for each transaction as well as a percentage of the amount charged. You may also encounter monthly fees, setup fees, statement fees and others. This is one of the costs of doing business online and should be factored into any business budget. You have to spend something to accept payment, but do spend some time researching the different payment options available so you don’t end up spending more than necessary. 6. Figure out your pricing. Now that you know how to get paid, it’s time to figure out how much. Setting the pricing for your products is often one of the hardest parts of doing business. If you charge too much, consumers will go to your competitors. If you charge too little, you’ll leave money on the table and may not make enough profit to stay afloat. The first step here is to research what other businesses are charging for similar products. Look up a number of your top competitors and make a note of the prices you see on their website. Capture this information in a spreadsheet or database so you can more easily compare what you find. Make note of how your competitors handle shipping costs as well. Shipping is a significant part of the cost involved in online shopping. Passing the full shipping cost on to your customers can lose you sales, but swallowing too much of it can end up costing you big. Seeing how similar businesses handle shipping will help you stay competitive there as well. Next, figure out your own expenses. Tally up everything from the cost of buying or creating your products or to the fees you’ll pay to process orders to cost of maintaining your website. If you’ll be hiring help, that’s another big expense to factor in. Do the math to figure out how much profit you need to make for the business to be worth it. Pricing is notoriously difficult. The information you obtain by doing everything in this step will give you a starting point for now, but you should also do price testing over time to figure out if the initial prices you chose should change. 7. Take high-quality product photographs. Many people are image driven. And for many types of products, being able to see what you’ll get plays a big role in the decision to buy. So your product photography needs to be effective . If you can afford it, consider hiring a professional photographer. They’ll already have a good handle on the best lighting and angles to make your products look great. If not, at least invest in the right equipment to take the best photographs possible yourself. Use a good camera, a tripod, lights, and a background to set up the shot just right. Take a lot of different shots so you can choose the best one. The right photograph can make the difference in whether or not a customer decides to buy. 8. Write effective sales copy. The photos will tell consumers part of what they need to know, but you need the right words to fill in the rest. This is another area where you’d benefit from hiring a professional. Sales copywriters know the best strategies and techniques to get visitors to take action. If that’s not in your budget at this time, do the research yourself to get up to speed on copywriting best practices . Websites like Copyblogger and Copyhackers are good resources to educate yourself on writing copy that drives sales. 9. Create a plan for packing and shipping orders. Online shoppers expect to get their orders fast. You need to be ready to package them and ship them out soon after they come in. Make sure you have a system in place for this. Buy the packing materials you need. Create a system for storing your products that makes it easy to find the item you need at the moment you need it. Set up business accounts with the carriers you plan to use and figure out how you’ll be getting the packages out. Most carriers offer the option to schedule a pickup (sometimes for a fee), or you can get the packages to the carrier’s office yourself. The amount of time customers spend waiting on an order has a big effect on how satisfied they’ll be with their experience. Having a system in place for dealing with shipping will make you more efficient and prepared when you start getting those orders. 10. Promote your website. Building an ecommerce website isn’t enough to start selling products online. Now you need to help people find you. Online marketing is an important part of any business website’s success. Look into the tactics available to see which ones sound right for your business. Some of the main ecommerce promotion tactics to consider are: PPC advertising – Buying ads that show up on the search engine results page and other sites around the web that you only pay for when someone clicks to visit your site. Social media marketing – Developing a social media presence by starting accounts on different platforms, interacting with relevant people, and promoting your website to your followers. Content marketing – Creating quality content that’s helpful to your target audience to improve SEO and build trust with your readers. Email marketing – Building an email list and sending marketing emails and promotion offers to your subscribers. Affiliate marketing – Affiliate programs and p artnering with bloggers and other content creators around the web to have them promote your products in exchange for a cut of the profits when their followers make a purchase. You don’t have to do all of these, but commit to doing some marketing activities to start getting your website out there where people will find it. Online marketing is an ongoing process and a lot of the most effective tactics take time to pay off. But if you want people to find your website and buy your products, it needs to be a part of your business plan. Ready to Sell Products on Your Website? The option to sell products on a website has put entrepreneurship into the hands of many people who wouldn’t have been able to afford the costs of starting a business otherwise. While it does still require time and work – like any business does – the upfront costs are comparatively low, making it a less risky way to run a business. Whether you’re a long-term business owner that’s been dragging your feet on getting online or a hopeful entrepreneur-to-be trying to learn the ropes to get started, building an ecommerce website could be the path to higher profits and long-term business success. 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Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged beach, business, costs, credit-card, design, domain-name, ecommerce, hostgator, hosting, visitors, web hosting, web hosting tips
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Best Website Builder for Blogging
The post Best Website Builder for Blogging appeared first on HostGator Blog . You’ve decided you want to start a blog. You have ideas or creations you want to share with the world and a blog is the best way to do that. But if you’ve never built a website before and don’t know the first thing about it, it’s hard to know where to start. For aspiring bloggers with limited (or no) technical skills, there’s an easy solution: a website builder . Why Bloggers Should Use a Website Builder Using a website builder brings a few key benefits that make it the perfect choice for newbie bloggers. 1. Website builders make website building fast. With a website builder, you don’t have to start from scratch. You can choose a template you like that already has most of the design and elements you need in place, then make whatever tweaks to it you want to make it yours. If you’re not too picky and the changes are minor, it can take a matter of minutes to get your website ready. Even if you want to go further and make the site more uniquely yours, having a basic structure in place to start and an intuitive website editor means the time commitment in getting there is still minimal. 2. Website builders are easy to sue. You don’t have to know how to code or take time to learn a complicated new piece of software. Most website builders are designed to be easy for anyone to use, even someone with very little previous web experience. If the main thing that’s kept you from starting a blog has been the worry that you won’t be able to figure out the technical side of things, a website builder can take that concern off the table. 3. Website builders are affordable. While the cost of different website builders varies, you can find many affordable options — including some that are entirely free. Those that do charge a fee usually range somewhere from $4-$40 a month and some include additional features you need for your blog, such as domain name or web hosting. If you don’t have the budget to hire a web designer – and most new bloggers don’t – a website builder is a much cheaper option that can still get you up and running with a functional website that looks good. 4. Website builders offer versatile design options. One possible downside of working from a template is that dozens or even hundreds of other bloggers may be using the same template. You don’t want your blog to be confused for someone else’s because of a similar design. The good news is that most decent website builders provide a lot of different templates to choose from and allow for nearly endless customization options for each one. You can change out colors and shapes, add new elements to the page, move things around to different spots, load original images and copy, and select your favorite fonts. In short, you can make dozens or even hundreds of little changes that result in an entirely unique site that sets your blog apart from any similar ones out there. 5. Website builders make it easy to add media. A good website builder will also make it easy for you to load your own media to your blog. You can add images, video, audio files, and animations. Whether your blog is about sharing your words with the world, getting your visual work in front of more people, or a combination of both, a website builder makes the process easier. 7 Features Bloggers Should Look for in a Website Builder Once you’ve decided to use a website builder to create your blog, the question then becomes, “Which website builder?” There are eight main things to look for when choosing a website builder for blogging. 1. Easy to use If the whole point of going with a website builder is that you don’t have to learn how to build and edit a website from scratch, then it’s obviously important that the website builder you choose not have a big learning curve. Look for a website builder that advertises an intuitive website editor that has drag-and-drop functionality and doesn’t require any real training to start using. And while ideally, you’ll be able to start using your website builder from day one without trouble, check also that the provider offers useful resources to help you learn the different features and functionality available so you can get the most out of it. 2. Mobile friendly More than half of all online use now happens on mobile devices. If your website isn’t mobile friendly, you risk visitors leaving your site before they read your posts and Google penalizing you in their search engine rankings. In short, it’s crucial that you make your blog mobile friendly . When choosing a website builder for your blog, look for one that provides responsive templates that look as good on mobile as they do on desktop. If your template is responsive, you won’t have to do any extra work to make sure your blog works on mobile devices. 3. Lots of templates The more template options you have, the easier it will be to find one that comes close to what you want. When you start out with a template you like the look and structure of, you won’t have to make as many changes and your job will be easier. 4. SEO features You want people to find your blog, right? Otherwise, you could just start a personal journal. The main way people find content online is with search engines. To make your blog more visible to potential readers, you’ll need to do what you can to improve the site’s SEO . A website builder that provides SEO features will make that process easier. It can help you customize your URLs, title tags, and meta descriptions on each page for better results in the search engines. 5. Media library If your blog will be 100% written blog posts, this may not matter much for you, but if you hope to share videos, images, music, podcasts, webinars – any type of media — then you’ll want to make sure the website builder you choose makes loading and adding media to your pages a simple process. And honestly, every blog should include images. Even if they’re not your strong suit, you should treat them as a necessary part of blogging. If you hate the idea of finding or creating a great image for every post you write, a website builder that provides an image library can make that part of the job easier. 6. Analytics Your blog is probably a passion project, but that doesn’t mean it’s entirely for you. You care about what people think of it and how they’ll interact with it. To understand how people find your blog and which posts they like most, you’ll need to pay attention to analytics. Any website can set up Google Analytics to gain a lot of useful insights about their visitors, but a good website builder will also include an analytics feature that puts some of that information in the same place you go for website updates. 7. Social sharing options SEO is one big part of getting people to find your blog, the other biggest tool for gaining more visibility is social media. You can encourage readers that like your posts to share them with their followers by making social sharing easy. You want to be able to quickly share posts out on your own social accounts and make it easy for visitors to do the same. The Best Website Builder for Blogging HostGator’s website builder provides all of these features and more. It’s easy to use, offers over 100 responsive templates, and comes with easy-to-understand analytics to help you improve your blog over time. And for blogging newbies who could use some handholding, we offer 24/7 customer support to help you learn the ropes and address any issues that come up (although our builder is so easy to use, you probably won’t need it). Stop just thinking about starting that blog and go ahead and get to work building it. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged budget, design, dozens-or-even, hostgator, hosting, make-it-easy, search, vodahost, web hosting tips
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10 Ways to Speed Up Your Website
The post 10 Ways to Speed Up Your Website appeared first on HostGator Blog . There’s no doubt about it – website speed matters. As average internet connection speeds increase around the world and mobile use dominates, web users are becoming less and less tolerant of slow load times. 53% of mobile users will abandon a website that takes longer than three seconds to load, and nearly 10% of web users will bounce after 2 seconds. Clearly, every second counts. At the same time, Google has stated unequivocally that page speed is a ranking factor in search results . In short, a fast site gets better results both from visitors and Google. To take advantage of these dual benefits, you need to make site speed a priority on your site. Any of the following ten tips will help to get you started on this important path. 1. Optimize Your Images. Every time someone visits a page on your website, their browser has to load every part of the page. On many pages, the parts that take up the most space and therefore take the longest time to load are the images. One of the best and easiest ways to get your pages loading faster is therefore to optimize your images . This quick two-step image optimization process can go a long way to speeding your website up. Step 1: Re-size your images before uploading them. If you use a content management system (CMS) like WordPress or Joomla , you’ve probably noticed that you can upload images at full size and then adjust their display size within your website’s backend. That’s convenient, but you may not know that doing so forces web browsers to execute multiple commands each time someone loads the page. They must pull up the initial image and then re-size it on the fly – which slows down your site. To prevent this from occurring, use an image-editing program to adjust images to the correct size yourself before adding them to your site. Most of us will have access to a simple tool like Preview (on Mac) or Microsoft Paint (on Windows). With these programs all you have to do is open up the image and re-size it in your editor of choice. Step 2: Compress your images. Once you’ve done this you can take your image editing to the next level with a compression tool. Even after re-sizing an image the total file size could be large enough to still slow down your site’s loading speed. One of the best image compression tools available is ImageResize . All you have to do is click the link, upload your re-sized image and this tool will reduce the file size without reducing the resolution. Then, all you have to do is download the image and upload it to your site. Your images will look exactly the same, but will load much faster. 2. Do a Plugin Purge. The huge number of plugins and scripts that available for free makes it tempting for website owners to add more than they truly need. Keep in mind, every plugin you add requires resources to run – and more resources means a slower site. If you notice your site is running slowly, or you believe it could be running much more effectively, perform a plugin review. Go through the list and identify any plugins you aren’t actually using or that don’t seem to be adding anything worthwhile to your site performance. Go ahead and get rid of these. If you still feel your website isn’t loading as quickly as you’d like, do a test to find the culprit. Disable every plugin on your site, one by one. After you disable a plugin, run your site through a tool like GT Metrix to check the speed of your site with it gone. If your site speed increases after deactivating a particular plugin, then you’ve found the problem. If the plug-in in question provides a necessary functionality, experiment until you find another plugin that does the same thing without slowing your site down. To save yourself from this trouble in the future, ask yourself moving forward before adding a new plug-in if the functionality is really worth the trade-off in site speed. 3. Ensure Your Site Scripts Are Up to Date. Depending on the CMS or e-commerce platform your site uses, you may need to check back regularly to determine whether new releases of your site’s scripts are available. If they are, upgrade your site as soon as possible (making sure that you have a current backup file in place first). Site script developers are always working on improving their code for future releases, particularly when it comes to site speed. Updating your scripts to the latest versions could go a long way toward eliminating coded roadblocks that prevent your site from loading quickly. If your site runs on WordPress, then you’ll find these updates within the Updates tab of your WordPress dashboard. Just one click and your site will install the latest software updates. No need for anything else on your end. Admittedly, remembering to check-in and update your website can be tough. Lucky for you this isn’t something you have to do on a daily basis. Once a month is enough to do a simple run-through of your site and install any updates that might be available. Set a recurring event on your calendar and set aside an hour every single month. Usually, it’ll take much less time than this, but it’s important to build the habit of always ensuring your site and plugins are running the latest version. Plus, having all of your software up to date will help to patch up any holes that could lead to your site being hacked . 4. Make Use of CDNs. Content Delivery Networks , or CDNs, are vast networks of servers that are housed around the world. Typically, if you’re not using a CDN, then your site will load from your web hosting server’s central location for every visitor to your site, no matter where they are geographically. This can lead to slow site speeds, especially if your visitors are located far away from the central location of your server. Additionally, if you’re just using a single server, there’s a chance it could get overloaded and cause your site to crash. CDN’s solve both of these problems by letting your users access a cached version of your site from the web host that’s closest to them. Better yet, if one of your server locations is overloaded, they can be switched to a new server location, ensuring faster speeds all around. To get started, look into the CDN services offered by SiteLock TrueSpeed , MaxCDN , or Cloudflare . 5. Enable Browser Caching. Browser caching is a technology that allows a visitor’s browser to store copies of your site’s individual pages so that when the visitor returns in the future, the content can be called up from within the cache rather than reloading the entire page. This saves the number of resources used to display your pages, resulting in faster overall load times for your visitor. If you use WordPress, you can easily enable browser caching with a plug-in like W3 Total Cache . To install this plugin on your WordPress site, follow the steps below: Navigate to your site’s Dashboard, then Plugins > Add New , and search for W3 Total Cache. Click Install , then Activate . Once the plugin is activated, navigate to the new Performance tab at the top or lefthand side. This is where you’ll control all of the features of the plugin. There are a ton of features that you can turn on or off with this plugin. If you want to fully configure this plugin, then check out this post by WPMU DEV . Alternatively, talk to your web developer about ways to integrate browser caching into your server-side scripting. 6. Turn On Gzip Compression. Gzip compression is a technology that minimizes the size of browser-based HTTP responses – sometimes by as much as 70%. If that doesn’t make sense, don’t worry. You don’t need to fully understand how it works to implement it for your site. There are three ways to turn on Gzip compression on your site. You can: 1. Add the following code to your site’s .htaccess file: # compress text, html, javascript, css, xml: AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/plain AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/html AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/xml AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/css AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/xml AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/xhtml+xml AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/rss+xml AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/javascript AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE application/x-javascript # Or, compress certain file types by extension: SetOutputFilter DEFLATE 2. Add the following code to the top of your HTML or PHP page: 3. Install a Gzip compression plugin like the W3 Total Cache tool for WordPress (just keep in mind what we said earlier about installing too many unnecessary plugins!). 7. Keep CSS files at the Top and Javascript at the Bottom. Finally, keep your site’s code neat and tidy by adding CSS files to the top of your page’s code and Javascript snippets to the bottom when working with raw HTML pages. Adding your CSS files to the top of the page prohibits progressive rendering, saving resources that web browsers would otherwise use to load and redraw elements of your pages. Adding Javascript to the bottom prevents your pages from waiting on full code execution before loading – leading to a faster browsing experience for your visitors. 8. Reduce Http Requests. When someone new visits your website, every single element on the web page has to download for them to view it. That includes images, videos, animations, style sheets, scripts, fonts — you name it. For each element you have on the page, a different http request is made. The more different parts each page on your site is made up of, the more http requests are made each time someone visits your site, and the longer the page will take to load. That doesn’t mean you need to strip your web pages down to a minimalist web design to slow down your loading time. There are tricks you can use to identify and reduce the number and size of http requests on your page without losing out on the style you want your site to have. To start, spot how many http requests are on a page on your website by using your browser tools. The process is similar in different browsers, here are specific steps for the main two: In Chrome: Right-click on the webpage Choose Inspect Click the Network tab Reload the page In Firefox: Right-click on the page Choose Inspect Element Click on the Network tab Reload the page This will show you not only how many http requests are required for the page, but also how long each one takes to load. You may be able to spot some items on the list that aren’t worth the time they require that you can remove altogether. Even if you don’t, you have options to speed things up: Option 1: Reduce file size. Look for opportunities in the list to reduce the file size of different elements. Our section on optimizing images includes some good tips. You can also minify the codes in your HTML, CSS, and Javascript files by removing any unnecessary coding or whitespace. Online tools like Autoptimize (for WordPress) and HTML Minifier can make this step easier. Option 2: Combine files. If you have more than one Javascript or CSS file for your webpage, combining them will reduce the number of http requests the page has to make. Tools like JCH Optimize and Cloudflare can help with this. 9. Minimize and Optimize Redirects. Sometimes redirects are necessary, but if they’re used any more than required they can slow down page load times. Regularly check the links on your website to make sure that all your links — internal and external — go directly to the main URL for a page. In the cases where you do need to use redirects , make sure you only use one redirect for a page. You never want a browser to have to do the work of redirecting a visitor from one page to another that redirects it to a third. And avoid having additional URLs that redirect people back to your main site. It can be tempting to buy up all the variations on your URL name and primary keywords you can think of and have them all point page to your website, but that will both slow things down and could cause confusion for your visitors. 10. Upgrade Your Web Hosting. When starting out, you probably selected the cheapest hosting option for your website. That’s normal and usually works well enough for a new website while you’re starting to build visibility and traffic. As your marketing efforts start to pay off and your traffic increases, your hosting needs change. If your website traffic has increased considerably and you haven’t upgraded your hosting plan to match, that’s likely to cause slow or spotty performance issues. Going from shared hosting to cloud hosting , or from shared to a VPS , can make a huge difference to how quickly your website loads for visitors. Check with your web hosting provider to see if it’s time to upgrade, or consider if it might be time to switch to a new provider. HostGator’s known for having a 99.9% uptime guarantee and has representatives that will answer any questions you have about selecting the right web hosting plan to keep your website fast and functional. Conclusion Although these are only a few of the different techniques that can be used to speed up your site, they’re some of the easiest to implement. This list is a great place to start if you notice your site slowing down. When every second counts, every step you can take for a faster website is worth it. Having said all of the above, sometimes a slow site is simply caused by inadequate hosting. With HostGator , whether you have a cloud hosting, shared hosting or VPS hosting plan, your site will be served from industry-standard technology and backed by 24/7/365 award-winning technical support via telephone and LiveChat. We make it painless to transfer and are happy to assist every step of the way. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading