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5 Website Problems Killing Your Business (And How to Fix Them Fast)

Your website is bleeding money right now, and you probably don’t even know it.

Every day, potential customers land on your site ready to buy. But within seconds, they leave and choose your competitor instead. Why? Because your website has problems that are invisible to you but glaringly obvious to them.

Here’s the wake-up call: 88% of online consumers won’t return to a website after a bad experience. Even worse, 75% of users judge your credibility based solely on your website design.

The good news? Most website problems are easy to fix once you know what to look for.

Let’s dive into the five deadliest website problems and their simple solutions.

Problem #1: Your Website Loads Too Slowly

Why This Matters

Speed kills—or in this case, slowness kills your sales. 53% of mobile users abandon sites that take longer than 3 seconds to load. That’s more than half your potential customers gone before they even see your content. Google also penalizes slow websites in search rankings. A one-second delay can reduce conversions by 7%.

Quick Fixes

Optimize Your Images:
  • Compress images before uploading (use TinyPNG or ShortPixel)
  • Enable lazy loading so images load only when needed
  • Convert images to modern formats like WebP
Speed Up Your Hosting:
  • Upgrade from cheap shared hosting to better options
  • Consider managed WordPress hosting or cloud solutions
  • Implement a Content Delivery Network (CDN) like Cloudflare
Technical Improvements:
  • Enable browser caching
  • Minimize HTTP requests
  • Remove unnecessary plugins and scripts
  • Test your speed using Google PageSpeed Insights

JavaScript

We love to bring designs to life as a developer, and I aim to do this using whatever front end tools are necessary. My preferred tools are more modern javascript libraries like React.js but I like to use whatever is best for the websites needs. There are several reasons why a business would consider a rebrand and it doesn’t necessarily mean the business has been unsuccessful.

Framework

Always ready to push the boundaries, especially when it comes to our own platform, Our analytical eye to create a site that was visually engaging and also optimised for maximum performance. It also perfectly reflects the journey to help it tell a story to increase its understanding and drive action. To create a site that was visually engaging for maximum performance.

Visual Studio

Just like other pseudo-elements and pseudo-class selectors, :not() can be chained with other pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements. For example, the following will add a “New!” word to list items that do not have a .old class name, using the ::after pseudo-element:

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