Why would an image that's much smaller than our Website header logo be taking so long to load?
-
When I check http://www.ccisolutions.com at Pingdom, we have a tiny graphic that is taking much longer to load than other graphics that are much bigger. Can anyone shed some light on why this might be happening and what can be done to fix it?
Thanks in advance!
Dana
-
Thanks so much Alan for this great response. While I am not as technically savvy as you and Jason, I knew that I shouldn't 100% rely on Pingdom either, so I am very familiar with the other tools you mentioned and use them routinely.
Since my hands are tied as I have no access to either server or source code. as I mentioned to Jason, I will be taking these suggestions to our IT Director to see how far I can get in addressing these issues.
I am on the PageSpeed warpath, and really appreciate your generous response.
I'll let you know what happens!
Dana
-
Thanks so much Jason,
This is great information. As I do not have access to the server or source code, I am going to take your response, in addition to Alan's to our IT Director and see what kind of actions we can take.
It's a bit of a relief to know that the images aren't our biggest problem.
Your comment about 304's is very timely because last week I was scouring through server log files and noticed quite a few 304's. You've pretty much answered my question on why I found so many of those.
These are all the pains of self-hosting with insufficient staff and know-how to set things up properly. Hoepfully, we can get by with a little help from our friends.
Thanks so much!
Dana
-
All great info so far. Let me add some considerations.
CSS images - 16 - total file size - 455,806
Quite often a site references images in CSS files that aren't even displayed on some, most or nearly all pages. They're baked into the CSS style sheet used across part or all of the site.
When this happens, Google crawls all of those images regardless of whether they're displayed. They do so because it's one of their goals to "discover all the content you have". Because of that, their crawler has no choice but to make extra calls to the server for every image referenced.
So every call to the server adds to the page speed that matters most to Google rankings. As a result, if a review of those images shows they are not needed on key pages of the site, consider having a different style sheet created for those pages that doesn't include them in the CSS.
Also, while Pingdom helps to detect possible bottlenecks (I use it solely for this reason) it is NOT a valid representation of potential page speed problems as far as Google's system is concerned. The reason is the Pingdom system does not process a page's content the way the Google system does. So even if Google Analytics reports a page speed of 15 seconds, Pingdom will routinely report a speed a tiny fraction of that.
While not ideal, I always rely on URIValet.com and WebPageTest.org (the '1st run test, not the "2nd run, because that caches processing) to do my evaluation comparisons.
Where I DO use Pingdom, is when I enter in a URL (be sure to set the test server to a U.S. server, not their European server), when the test has been run, I click over to the "Page Analysis" tab. That breaks down possible bottleneck points in file types, process types, and even domains (if you have 3rd party service widgets or code that's a big issue sometimes and this will show the possible problem sources).
For example, for your home page, that report shows 73% of even that system's own time was processing images. And it also shows six domain sources, with 94.49% of the process time coming from your own domain.
Note an interesting thing though - that report also shows 63% of the time was due to "connect" time - meaning more than half of even Pingdom's process was sucked up just connecting wwhich helps reaffirm the notion that if Google has to make many requests of your server, each request has to connect and thus it can add to overall speed.
-
Hey Dana,
Smooshing images is always a best practice, but in your case, I tool a peek at your homepage and your images aren't that poorly optimized. In your case image optimization is going to save you 30K of 176K in images on your homepage. (I still wouldn't discourage you from setting up automated image optimization such as smoosh).
Your bigger performance problems are that you aren't using gzip on your CSS or JS files. Turning on GZip for your .css and .js files would save you 110K out of 236K in text files.
By far the biggest thing you could do to speed up your user experience would be to set a reasonable browser cache for all your static assets. You're website has many assets that are used on every page the visitsor sees (like all the stuff in your header, footer, and nav). The browswer should download those files the first time the visitor hists and pages, and then when they go to every other page, the browser should know it's OK to use the local copy rather than going back to the server to see if their is a newer version. But because their is no browser cache set, the browser is obligated to check with the server every time. In most cases the browser will get an error 304 error when it asks for the same file again (error 304 means the asset hasn't changed since the last time you ask), so the browser uses the local copy, but all that hand-shaking takes time that you could save if you set browser cache times for all your asset.
GZip is #3 on the SEO Tips article you found, Browser Caching is #1, and those are the two things that are costing your particular homepage the most page performance issues.
-Jason
-
Thanks Charles,
Your comments made me curious for more information because I am sooooo not a graphics person. You sent me in the right direction and I appreciate that. I also found this post here at SeoMoz: http://www.seomoz.org/blog/15-tips-to-speed-up-your-website
Looks like we have some smooshing to do!
Dana
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
How to get into Google's Tops Stories?
Hi All, I have been doing research for a few weeks and I cannot for the life of me figure out why I cannot get my website (Racenet) into the top stories in Google. We are in Google News, have "news article" schema, have AMP pages. Our news articles also perform quite well organically and we typically dominate the Google News section. We have two main competitors (Punters and Just Horse Racing) who are both in top stories and I cannot find anything that we are doing that they aren't. Apparently the AMP "news article" schema is incorrect and that could be the reason why we aren't showing up in Google Top Stories, but I can't find anything wrong with the schema and it looks the same as our competitors. For example: https://search.google.com/structured-data/testing-tool/u/0/#url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.racenet.com.au%2Fnews%2Fblake-shinn-booked-to-ride-doncaster-handicap-favourite-alizee-20190331%3FisAmp%3D1 Does anyone have any ideas of why I cannot get my site into Google Top Stories? Any and all help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks! 🙂
Technical SEO | | Saba.Elahi.M.0 -
In Facebook when i place my site URL the image does not load?
In Facebook when i place my site URL the image does not load? It loads some generic image or logo but not other image thats related to the page. Is there any Tag we need to add in the website so the image loads? Is it good to use a tag as this for description? property="og:description" content="Some data" />
Technical SEO | | bsharath0 -
Why are these URL's suddenly appearing in WMT?
One of our clients has suddenly experienced a sudden increase in crawl errors for smart phones overnight for pages which no longer exist and there are no links to these pages according to Google. There is no evidence as to why Google would suddenly start to crawl these pages as they have not existed for over 5 years, but it does come after a new site design has been put live. Pages do not appear to be in the index when a site search is used. There was a similar increase in crawl errors on desktop initially after the new site went live, but these quickly returned to normal. Mobile crawl errors only became apparent after this. There are some URL's showing which have no linking page detected so we don't know where these URL's are being found. WMT states "Googlebot couldn't crawl this URL because it points to a non-existent page". Those that do have a linking page are showing an internal page which also doesn't exist so it can't possibly link to any page. Any insight is appreciated. Andy and Mark at Click Consult.
Technical SEO | | ClickConsult0 -
Has Google stopped rendering author snippets on SERP pages if the author's G+ page is not actively updated?
Working with a site that has multiple authors and author microformat enabled. The image is rendering for some authors on SERP page and not for others. Difference seems to be having an updated G+ page and not having a constantly updating G+ page. any thoughts?
Technical SEO | | irvingw0 -
Building URL's is there a difference between = and - ?
I have a Product Based Search site where the URL's are built dynamically based on the User input Parameters Currently I use the '=' t o built the URL based on the search parameters for eg: /condition=New/keywords=Ford+Focus/category=Exterior etc Is there any value in using hypen's instead of = ? Could you please help me in any general guidelines to follow
Technical SEO | | Chaits0 -
Client's site dropped completely for all keywords, but not brand name - not manual penalty... help!
We just picked up a new search client a few weeks ago. They've been a customer (we're an automotive dealer website provider) since October of 2011. Their content was very generic (came from the previous provider), so we did a quick once-over as soon as he signed up. Beefed up his page content, made it more unique and relevant... tweaked title tags... wrote meta descriptions (he had none). In just over a week, he went from ranking on page 4 or 5 for his terms to ranking on page 2 or 3. My team was working on getting his social media set up, set up his blog, started competitor research... And then this last weekend, something happened and he dropped completely from the rankings... He still shows up if you do a site: search, or if you search his exact business name, but for everything else, he's nowhere to be found. His URL is www.ohioautowarehouse.com, business name is "Ohio Auto Warehouse" We filed a reconsideration request on Monday, and just got a reply today that there was no manual penalty. They suggested we check our content, but we know we didn't do anything spammy or blackhat. We hadn't even fully optimized his site yet - we were just finishing up his competitor research and were planning on a full site optimization next week... so we're at a complete loss as to what happened. Also, he's not ranking for any of the vehicles in his inventory. Our vehicle pages always rank on page 1 or 2, depending on how big the city is... you can always search "year make model city" and see our customers' sites (whether they're doing SEO or not). This guy's cars aren't showing up... so we know something is going on... Any help would be a lifesaver. We've been doing this for quite some time now, and we've never had a site get penalized. Since the reconsideration request didn't help, we're not sure what to do...
Technical SEO | | Greg_Gifford0 -
For Google + purposes, should the author's name appear in the Meta description or title tag of my web site just as you would your key search phrase?
Relative to Cyrus Shepard's article on January 4th regarding Google's Superior SEO strategy, if I'm the primary author of all blog articles and web site content, and I have a link showing authorship going back to Google Plus, is a site wide link from the home page enough or should that show up on all blog posts etc and editorial comment pages etc? Conversely, should the author's name appear in the Meta description or title tag of my web site just as you would your key search phrase since Google appears to be trying to make a solid connection with my name, and all content?
Technical SEO | | lwnickens0 -
If I redirect my WordPress blog to my main site, will it help my main site's SEO?
I have separate sites for my blog and main website. I'd like to link them in a way that enables the blog to boost my main site's SEO. Is there an easy way to do this? Thanks in advance for any advice...
Technical SEO | | matt-145670