Conversion Rate Optimization: Does Your Host Have the Cure for Attrition?
|
 |
Visited: 2958 |
|
|
| 3.0/5.0 (2 votes total) |
|
|
|
|
by Frederick Townes November 27, 2006
|
| Frederick Townes |
Frederick
Townes is the owner of W3 HOSTING. W3 HOSTING provides business
web hosting solutions
and services. Frederick writes with years of experience web
design
and web hosting technologies. If your site is important to your
business, choosing a host that offers great features and support
may be the most important decision you make this year.
|
| Frederick Townes
has written 5 articles for HostReview. |
| View all articles by Frederick Townes... |
There
are plenty of reasons visitors convert and even more reasons they
don’t. The site’s layout, color choices, word choices and call to
action, button/anchor text, layout, nomenclature and similar factors
all have an impact on a site’s conversion rate. These are factors
that you can manage and control.
You
can make changes, tweak and refine your site to limit visitor
attrition, but if your web host isn’t helping, all the tweaking in
the world won’t give you the nice bump in conversions that you’re
looking for. If your host doesn’t partner with you for success,
you’ll never fully position your site for optimized conversion
rates.
The
Impatience Index
The
easier and more convenient your site is to access, the more it will
be accessed by visitors. However, in this Digital Age, we’ve become
impatient. Any perception on the part of web users that time is being
wasted will hurt your bottom line. Call it The Impatience Index.
There’s a direct correlation between download times and visitor
attrition.
The
numbers speak for themselves. 84% of visitors will sit through a
10-second download. The number drops to 54% with a 20-second
download, and the stick-around rate really tanks with a 30-second
download. Only 5% of visitors are willing to wait that long. You lose
79% of potential visitors between 10 seconds and 30 seconds.
Obviously, the faster your site downloads, the more visitors you’ll
have and the more visitors you have, the lower your site’s
attrition rate.
HTTP
Acceleration
Most
web hosts don’t want you to know about HTTP acceleration or
compression, as it’s also known, because it would impact their
bottom lines.
HTTP
acceleration improves site performance by delivering pages faster to
the user’s computer screen. It does this by compressing certain
types of files before those files are delivered to a visitor’s
browser, where the content is then decompressed. In effect, HTTP
acceleration takes the “air” out of site pages before visitors
ever see them. And there’s a lot of “air” in even the simplest
web sites.
HTTP
acceleration will compact almost any type of file. HTML files, load
between 65-85% faster. Cascading Style Sheets (CSS files) have a
faster delivery rate by 80-95%. With XML and JavaScript, HTTP
acceleration makes rich applications (Web 2.0 apps) based on AJAX,
JavaScript and XML for example, even more responsive and moves them
closer to the goal of creating a desktop application-like experience.
For
purposes of illustration, let’s say a home page uses 100kbs. When
deflated (compressed), that 100kb page becomes a 10kb page,
increasing the speed at which it is delivered to the user by a factor
of 10. This leads to significantly faster content downloads,
enhancing the visitor’s site experience.
So,
why don’t web hosts want you to know about HTTP acceleration?
Because web hosts make a lot of money on transmission costs –
bandwidth. A 10kb home page will cost less to transmit, use less
bandwidth and generate less revenue for the web host than the 100kbs
uncompressed version of the same page.
HTTP
web site compression software is a server-side application, meaning
it’s loaded on to a host’s server. If your web host doesn’t
employ the software, there’s no way your site is fully optimized
for conversion.
"Smart"
companies, like Google and its web
accelerator,
are trying to resolve this problem by downloading and caching pages
before you visit them, but this still doesn't solve the problem. It
actually creates another one because they are abusing networks in
order to give users a better experience. The fact is, it's the
responsibility of site owners (and their hosts) to ensure that
they're correctly and optimally enhancing the users’ on-site
experience.
It
seems clear to me that when you head over to the shopping mall, it’s
each store’s obligation to ensure that there’s room for you and
that you don’t have to wait in line. Following Google’s approach
to solving the problem you’re either waiting in the food court for
entry to the store, stuck shopping for last years products or not
allowed entry into certain stores ever. As always
websiteoptimization.com
has a thorough review on the matter.
Who
Needs HTTP Acceleration?
Chances
are you do.
Let’s
start with e-commercial sites. The ability to deliver data faster,
and with complete transparency, will make site visitors happier. And
a happy visitor is more likely to make a purchase than one who just
sat through an interminable download. The Impatience Index, again.
On-line
businesses, which use the web primarily as a billboard or calling
card, will also benefit from acceleration software by presenting an
up-to-date, thoroughly professional image to visitors.
Businesses
that employ LANs and WANs need HTTP acceleration to lower
transmission costs. The fact is, any web presence will benefit from
this server-side compression technology – if they can find it.
Will
HTTP Acceleration Work With My Site’s Software?
The
technology doesn’t function as a separate application. A quality
web host will not only employ this widely-used server software, it
will also employ compression software for the benefit of their
clients. These are the web hosts that recognize that their
long-term success rest squarely on your site’s long-term success.
After all, it’s a lot easier to keep a happy client than it is to
find a new one and a happy client is one who stays in business.
Are
There Other Advantages to HTTP Acceleration?
There
are several.
SSL
(secure socket layer) or encrypted files are usually slow to make
their way to a visitor’s computer screen because they have to
encrypted and unencrypted before the visitor can view them. These two
steps slow down the delivery process, often by over 90% compared to
unencrypted files. However, with HTTP acceleration, the process of
conducting SSL file transfers increases both a site’s capacity and
speed to deliver more files faster because less data has to be
encrypted
SSL
files are compressed prior to encryption that means less data
actually has to go through the encryption process, boosting delivery
rate by up to 1000%.
Obviously,
this enhances the visitor’s experience while lowering your
transmission costs – critical to site profitability, especially for
businesses working on slim margins in competitive markets.
Second,
if you think of a site as a pie, compression software makes more of
that pie available for other features, i.e., Flash animation,
graphically rich interfaces, QuickTime videos and other features that
define a sophisticated, well-designed site. With those sites buying
limited transfer from a web host, this allows site owners to do more
things and provide more goodies with less resources – a money saver
in both the short- and long-term. In fact, you’ll start to see
savings immediately when you go with a host that offers this
technology.
And
finally, this is a big one: file compression software on your
host server increases any commercial site’s profitability by
increasing the site’s ability and capacity to deliver data without
requiring or using additional bandwidth. This leads to a noticeable
drop in operating costs – costs that most owners have always
believed are fixed. They aren’t when you go with quality hosting.
In
fact, if you’re with a web host who, for its own, obvious reasons,
doesn’t employ this technology, you’re losing profitability every
month you stay put.
So,
Should I Migrate to a Host That Provides HTTP Compression Software?
Absolutely,
even if there are still a few months left on your annual
subscription. If your host doesn’t offer this technology, which
benefits you, the client, and not the hosting company, then you’re
not working with a partner interested in your site’s ultimate
success.
Start
by asking your host’s customer service reps whether this software
is activated on your server. If you get a long song and dance about
why it isn’t (compatibility issues, overblown performance stats,
etc.) start shopping around for a new hosting service.
You’ll
see improved site performance, an enhanced visitor site experience,
and lower bandwidth costs. In the bang for buck equation, it’s
a must- have for any site owner, and well worth the time to find a
web host that wants your site to succeed just as much as you do.
The
Bottom line? E-commerce hosting companies should recognize their role
in the conversion funnel and help to ensure that your site delivers a
user experience conducive to the most desired action for your
visitors, before they fall into the visitor attrition stat’ column.
You
can have it all. It starts with the delivery.
|