Vrooom! Why Website Speed Matters. Typical consumers expect your website to load in less than two seconds, and they will leave your site if it doesn't.

By Brian Sutter Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

Shutterstock

When you imagine your website's visitors, what do you see? Small business owners? Local homeowners? Impatient clickers?

If your visitors are anything like other people on the web, they're almost certainly in that third group: the impatient crowd. These folks expect your site to load in the blink of an eye. If it doesn't, they're gone -- maybe never to return.

Now, I'm not saying your clients are bad people. Our natural frustration with waiting for a page to load doesn't mean we're overly demanding or even particularly stressed-out. It's just . . . normal behavior.

Related: Why a Good User Experience Is the Most Overlooked SEO Strategy

Fact is, slow pages are a drag. Nobody likes them. If people think they can find a faster page, or they can get the information faster, the average web users among them will click away -- fast.

How fast? Two to three seconds, depending on which research you cite.

According to Kissmetrics, 47 percent of consumers expect a page to load in two seconds or less. Kissmetrics' analytics say that 40 percent of consumers will abandon a website that takes more than three seconds to load.

This impatience doesn'taffect just how quickly people will bounce off a page if it doesn't load promptly. It has downright devastating affects on conversion rates too.

In fact, just a one-second delay in page load time can cut conversions by 7 percent. Amazon discovered this a few years ago. For that megasite, every extra second it takes a page to load costs the company an estimated $1.6 billion dollars in sales each year. Of course, a typical small business website won't suffer penalties like that. But who wants to lose 7 percent of leads or sales to something so simple and so fixable?

If users like fast pages so much, and it influences their behavior this strongly, is it any surprise that search engines care about it, too? The answer is no, which is why the swiftness with which pages load affects search rankings. It's not the strongest ranking signal, but it matters.

Related: Here's What Really Matters for SEO in 2016

Despite this importance of website speed, most small businesses have no plans for making any improvements. According to Clutch's Small Business Websites in 2016 survey, only 21 percent -- about one in five -- of small businesses surveyed said they planned on improving their website's performance.

While that's a bit discouraging, it can be good news for you: This is a prime opportunity to get ahead of your competition.

First thing to do? See how fast your site is right now. Google's free PageSpeed Insights tool will give you a pretty detailed analysis in less than a minute. The tool gives you a report for both mobile and desktop users.

Want a second opinion on how fast your site is? Try Pingdom's free tool. Some of these PageSpeed reports will look a bit advanced because, well,they are. If you are, in fact, pretty technical, there's a good how-to article on how to take those results and improve them.

The rest of us can do our part by keeping image sizes small and hosting our sites on speedy servers. Beyond that, it might be a good idea to hire a web developer -- or a technically savvy web designer to optimize your site speed. This person will be able to do in a few hours what it would take most of us days or even weeks to learn.

If you're unsure if a designer is worth the investment, consider what even a 10 percent boost in traffic to your website over the next year could be worth to you. Would it be worth less than the cost of hiring someone to do this work? If "no," then maybe that's a good investment.

Given that we know that increasing profits is a top challenge for 45 percent of small business owners, this seems like at least one way to get there.

Related: 9 Overlooked Ways to Make Visitors Love Your Website

So, of course website speed matters. And improving it could help your business a lot. While you may have to hire a website developer or designer to help speed up your site, you'll probably earn your money back -- fast.

Brian Sutter

Director of Marketing at Advantis Medical

Brian Sutter is the Director of Marketing at Advantis Medical, where he drives growth through data-driven strategies. Named one of The Huffington Post’s Top 8 Online Influencers in Digital Marketing, he has contributed to BIZ Experiences, Forbes, Fast Company, All Business, Medium, and others, writing about performance marketing, scalable tactics, and brand storytelling. His work helps businesses turn creative ideas into aggressive growth.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Making a Change

More Than 1,000 Business and Tech Courses Can Be Yours Forever for Just $20

Add coding, marketing, and finance skills to your title with this constantly updated course bundle.

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for BIZ Experiencess to pursue in 2025.

Starting a Business

Why Retirees Have a Hidden Edge as BIZ Experiencess

Retirement is no longer the endgame — it's the BIZ Experiencesial green light.

Science & Technology

Stop Using ChatGPT Like an Amateur — Turn It Into a $100K Business Strategist

I used one ChatGPT prompt to uncover exactly why my funnel wasn't converting — and how to fix it.

Growing a Business

How the Next Generation of BIZ Experiencess Is Outpacing Us — and Why

Today's founders are flipping the script and redefining how startups are built.

Business News

Venus Williams Just Played in Her First Professional Tennis Tournament in Years — to Keep Her Health Insurance

Tennis icon Venus Williams made more than $42 million during her professional career, but said this week that she needed to return to work to keep her insurance.