Zenify wrote: » I have created a website thats pretty good and responsive and is everything my business needs. I created it from a template online using Dreamweaver (i have a little experience from a long time ago). its a simple website with no cart or methods to purchase on it. i was planning on launching it but I've gotten some funding (TOV) so I'm hoping to improve it by adding a cart etc. I've asked a few companies for help but they all use WordPress and say they wouldn't be able to help with Dreamweaver. They all say (without seeing the site) that it should be scrapped and start again on WordPress. Should it be scrapped and start again using WordPress or wouldni find somebody who could add these functions to a site? also, pm me any recommendations please
B.A._Baracus wrote: » Honestly? You would be better off starting with wordpress. .
Zenify wrote: » There is something I need help with... The site is a bit slow and I would like to speed it up. I installed wp-rocket and that help a good bit. The main stumbling block is "eliminate render-blocking resources". Most of the wp-rocket settings that help with this cause problems with the appearance of my site so I have to toggle them off. Should I hire someone or is there an easy fix?
Oranage2 wrote: » Have you tried changing the slider plugin? Word press has many options so you can try a few. Also you should optimize the photos if you haven't, use some Software to reduce the size of all your photos. Lastly it could be the websites host, it might not be able to load pictures quickly.
Zenify wrote: » I reduced their size through photoshops image processor already. They are a little bigger than a normal picture for a website but we think users will zoom in on them.
Zenify wrote: » Slider plugin? I'm just using the standard image slider on elementor if that is what you are talking about for my pics? I did optimize the pics, most of them are around 150-200kb they are big but the photos are very important in this work. I ran the website through some online speed tests and the score wasn't great, I'm starting to realize maybe it's no big deal and the site is fine...
jimmycrackcorm wrote: » If you want users to be able to zoom in then have higher resolution versions as a separate click through. That way you can minimize the size of the initial images and allow the user to choose what they want to see in detail after loading. They may not want to zoom on any, or maybe just one. But no need to slow the whole site down just on a chance they might want to.
wba88 wrote: » The Good Your server is fine You have 1 image loading which is optimised well (before a user scrolls -thanks to lazy loading) It's a nice looking siteThe Bad Your site makes ~70 file requests before user interaction. 28 CSS and 32 JS. That's a lot. This is due to the use of Elementor and its plugins. Even though your cache is great it's still slow to load because of the amount of files and their size. If you're able to reduce some of that then you'll see an improvementThe Ugly (Non dev advice) Please put your prices on your website. Your website is a 24/7 salesperson, let it weed out people who aren't prepared to pay what you're charging and then you know the ones that do contact you know how much you charge and are still interested. It'll save you time in the long run. You can say contact us for bespoke orders etc. too
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Constructive feedback on design - a lot of the content is difficult to read, particularly for older people and people with any degree of sight loss. The main scheme of grey text on a white background doesn't provide enough contrast between text and background. The ALLCAPS headings are hard to read, as people rely on the shape of the words to read. ALLCAPS words have no shape. The cursive font used for the main heading isn't the most legible either. There's no point having stuff that looks beautiful if a chunk of your audience can't actually read it.
Zenify wrote: » The Bad Do you mean reduce plugins or reduce the css and Javascript? How would I go about identifying the CSS and JS to delete?
The price list is automatically sent with the form submission.
We use the price list as a treat in order to get peoples email addresses
This enables us to send a follow up email and have their details as a lead
I also use it as a conversion for Google and Facebook marketing. The people that submit that form are not Tyre kickers and therefore I tell marketing platforms to find lookalike audiences.
wba88 wrote: » I strongly advise you stop this immediately until you understand how to ask for their permissions for the above in accordance with GDPR. I would suggest listing the prices on the page with a contact form or information below it
Zenify wrote: » We say that this will happen in our privacy policy. The privacy policy is on the bottom of every page and I will include it on the cookie pop up too. They get one automated email with the list and then a second 2 days later with more details about the price list and how we are honering the price based on low numbers due to Covid. I probably worded it wrongly, saying we get their email details. It's just one email sent afterwards with more pricing details.