Insights

Google Lighthouse Performance

The Google Lighthouse performance score is a metric that measures the speed and performance of a website. It’s an overall score that ranges from 0 to 100 and is generated based on a number of different performance metrics, such as the time it takes for a website to load, the time it takes for a website to become interactive, the size of the resources used by the website, and other factors that impact the user experience.

A high performance score in Google Lighthouse indicates that a website is fast and responsive, which can lead to a better user experience and improved search engine rankings. On the other hand, a low performance score can indicate that a website is slow and unresponsive, and can negatively impact the user experience.

Mobile Performance
95%
Desktop Performance
94%

Core Web Vitals

Core Web Vitals are a set of specific factors that Google considers important in a webpage’s overall user experience. Core Web Vitals are made up of three specific page speed and user interaction measurements: Largest Contentful PaintFirst Input Delay, and Cumulative Layout Shift.

VitalMobileDesktopTarget
Largest Contentful Paint1.6 s0.4 s< 2.5 s
First Input Delay100 ms20 ms< 100ms
Cumulative Layout Shift00 0.1

Tracking scripts

All the tracking scripts on the site generated ~2 KB of data

A tracking script is a code snippet designed to track the flow of visitors who visit a website. Media, advertising, and analytics organisations will provide a script to add to your website that sends data directly to their servers. This data can then be used to measure goals and conversions, analyse user behaviour, and influence advertising campaigns.

Consider how much of this data you actually need and use? How often do you review the analytics data, and does this inform genuine change? Are you actively running social media campaigns? Consider pausing or removing tracking scripts that aren’t being actively used.

scripts.withcabin.com 1 2 KB

Opportunities

Subset large font files

Fonts should be subsetted to reduce the file size, improve performance, and reduce emissions. Subsetting a font involves removing any characters that are not needed for a particular use case, resulting in a smaller file size and faster page load times. Some specific reasons why fonts should be subsetted include:

  1. Reduced file size: Subsetting a font removes any unused characters, which can result in a smaller file size. This can help to reduce the amount of data that needs to be downloaded, leading to faster page load times and lower emissions.
  2. Improved performance: Fonts that are subsetted are faster to load and render than fonts that are not subsetted. This can help to improve the overall performance of a website, leading to a better user experience.

Overall, subsetting fonts is a good practice for anyone looking to optimize the performance and reduce the emissions of a website of a website.

Boogy_Brut_Poster_WEB-White.woff2 ~25 KB ~8 KB

Largest Contentful Paint

MobileDesktop
Score99%100%
Timing1.6 s0.4 s

Speed Index

MobileDesktop
Score53%43%
Timing5.6 s2.5 s

Max Potential First Input Delay

MobileDesktop
Score97%100%
Timing100 ms20 ms

Properly size images

MobileDesktop
Score100%97%
InsightPotential savings of 57 KiB

Serve images in next-gen formats

MobileDesktop
Score67%100%
InsightPotential savings of 87 KiB

Reduce initial server response time

MobileDesktop
GradeFailFail
InsightRoot document took 1,120 msRoot document took 1,130 ms

Uses efficient cache policy on static assets

MobileDesktop
Score90%91%
Insight17 resources found17 resources found

Image elements do not have explicit width and height

MobileDesktop
GradeFailFail