Why Slow Websites Lose Customers (And How to Fix It)

Speed is not a luxury feature. It’s a baseline expectation — and when your site doesn’t meet it, visitors leave.

53% of mobile users abandon a site if it takes more than 3 seconds to load. A one-second delay in load time can reduce conversions by 7%. Google uses page speed as a direct ranking factor.

In short, a slow website is silently losing you customers and search visibility every single day.

What Causes a Slow WordPress Website?

Oversized, uncompressed images are the most common culprit — a single unoptimized photo can be several megabytes when it could be a fraction of that size.

Too many plugins is another major factor. Every plugin adds code that your server has to process. Low-quality or poorly coded plugins make this significantly worse.

Poor hosting is often overlooked. Budget shared hosting puts your site on a server crowded with thousands of other sites. No caching means every visit requires a full page build from scratch. Too many external scripts from fonts, analytics tools, and social media embeds each add loading time.

How to Fix a Slow WordPress Website

Start by diagnosing the problem. Tools like Google PageSpeed Insights and GTmetrix give you a free speed score and a list of specific issues. From there: compress images, switch to quality managed hosting, install a caching plugin, clean up unused plugins, and enable a content delivery network.

How Fast Should Your Site Be?

Aim for a load time under 3 seconds on mobile and under 2 seconds on desktop. A Time to First Byte (TTFB) under 600ms is a good technical benchmark.

Speed optimization is one of the services we offer at IG Web Development. Get in touch for a free site audit and we’ll tell you exactly what’s slowing you down.