Most Travel Websites Not Optimized for Mobile Customers
January 21, 2016

Kent Alstad
Radware

Share this

Although half of all online travel bookings in the US are expected to occur via mobile device in 2016, 76% of the industry’s top 100 sites are slow to load, paralyzed by third-party scripts and trackers, and image-heavy, according to Radware's study titled 2015 State of the Union: Mobile Performance of the Top Travel Industry Sites: Do Your Customers Want To Take A Vacation From Your Slow Site?

In fact, the average page took 6.7 seconds to load on the iPhone 6, slower than the 4 second ideal time tolerated by shoppers.

These slow load times create an increase in consumer frustration and, ultimately site abandonment. A recent study of mobile travel site abandonment showed 36% of respondents cited slow loading times as their chief cause for site abandonment.

Today, consumers predominantly use mobile devices to book travel. By the end of 2015, mobile-booked travel is expected to reach $52.08 billion. With this level of exponential growth, travel websites have a lot to gain by preparing for the volume of mobile traffic they’ll be seeing in 2016.

Consumer habits are changing. Mobile devices are always within arm’s reach, so it comes as no surprise that consumers are reaching for them as they research and book travel. When planning for the New Year, travel companies must consider whether or not their websites are optimized for mobile, including the length of time it takes for a page to load and not just if it is mobile-responsive. If consumer habits shift and your site isn’t in shape, you’ll be booking them a one-way ticket to your competitor’s door.

Slow performance has a significant negative effect on business metrics, from shopping cart abandonment to brand perception. Radware tested the performance of 100 leading global travel sites with leading devices such as the Apple iPhone 6 and Samsung Galaxy S6 to obtain data around their performance against consumer expectations and projected industry growth for 2016.

The Radware report finds that there are a number of factors contributing to poor performance that can be fairly easily remedied:

■ Overloaded with Requests – Many of the sites have more than 62 requests on their home page for images, scripts and CSS files. Each request incurs latency and streamlining the page requests could improve performance.

■ Image Heavyweights – Mobile devices don’t have the processing power of laptops or desktops yet many sites are trying to replicate the full site experience while inadvertently compromising the user experience. Images often make up approximately a quarter of the weight of a page on average and are often improperly formatted causing high resolutions to waste bandwidth, processing and cache space.

■ Responsive Web Designs (RWD) Typically Optimize Viewing but Not Performance – Although RWD crafts an optimal viewing experience across a wide-range of devices and screens, it creates a complexity that can seriously slow down performance. It is possible to build a responsive site that is both fast and responsive but it requires knowledge of both design and front-end performance optimization.

■ Less Than A Quarter of Travel Sites Are Ready for 2016: Only 24% of the 100 mobile travel sites tested loaded in the ideal time of 4 seconds or less across devices.

■ More Screens, One Speed: 85% of mobile users expect pages to load as fast as or faster than they load on the desktop.

■ Every Asset Counts: 25% of a page’s weight came from images on average, and the average mobile travel site came in at over a megabyte, past the threshold for mobile’s fastest pages.

■ Your Brand Is Tested on Mobile: 65% of customers say their opinion of a brand was affected by their online experience, and 33% of users will go to a competitor’s site after a negative mobile experience.


Study Methodology: Radware conducted this study within the United States in November 2015. Real-world performance of the top 100 global mobile travel industry websites, as ranked by SimilarWeb Ltd., was tested. Tested sites were accessed using actual mobile devices connected to the AT&T 4G/LTE data network.

Kent Alstad is VP of Acceleration at Radware.

Kent Alstad is VP of Acceleration at Radware
Share this

The Latest

December 18, 2024

Industry experts offer predictions on how NetOps, Network Performance Management, Network Observability and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025 ...

December 17, 2024

In APMdigest's 2025 Predictions Series, industry experts offer predictions on how Observability and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025. Part 6 covers cloud, the edge and IT outages ...

December 16, 2024

In APMdigest's 2025 Predictions Series, industry experts offer predictions on how Observability and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025. Part 5 covers user experience, Digital Experience Management (DEM) and the hybrid workforce ...

December 12, 2024

In APMdigest's 2025 Predictions Series, industry experts offer predictions on how Observability and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025. Part 4 covers logs and Observability data ...

December 11, 2024

In APMdigest's 2025 Predictions Series, industry experts offer predictions on how Observability and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025. Part 3 covers OpenTelemetry, DevOps and more ...

December 10, 2024

In APMdigest's 2025 Predictions Series, industry experts offer predictions on how Observability and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025. Part 2 covers AI's impact on Observability, including AI Observability, AI-Powered Observability and AIOps ...

December 09, 2024

The Holiday Season means it is time for APMdigest's annual list of predictions, covering IT performance topics. Industry experts — from analysts and consultants to the top vendors — offer thoughtful, insightful, and often controversial predictions on how Observability, APM, AIOps and related technologies will evolve and impact business in 2025 ...

December 05, 2024
Generative AI represents more than just a technological advancement; it's a transformative shift in how businesses operate. Companies are beginning to tap into its ability to enhance processes, innovate products and improve customer experiences. According to a new IDC InfoBrief sponsored by Endava, 60% of CEOs globally highlight deploying AI, including generative AI, as their top modernization priority to support digital business ambitions over the next two years ...
December 04, 2024

Technology leaders will invest in AI-driven customer experience (CX) strategies in the year ahead as they build more dynamic, relevant and meaningful connections with their target audiences ... As AI shifts the CX paradigm from reactive to proactive, tech leaders and their teams will embrace these five AI-driven strategies that will improve customer support and cybersecurity while providing smoother, more reliable service offerings ...

December 03, 2024

We're at a critical inflection point in the data landscape. In our recent survey of executive leaders in the data space — The State of Data Observability in 2024 — we found that while 92% of organizations now consider data reliability core to their strategy, most still struggle with fundamental visibility challenges ...