Speed matters because it shapes the first impression. If a page feels slow, people assume the site is less trustworthy and less professional.
The useful question is not which score looks good in a report. It is whether the page feels quick enough for real visitors on real devices.
1. Start with the pages that matter most
The home page, service pages, and key landing pages usually deserve attention first because they carry the most business value.
2. Remove avoidable weight
Large images, unnecessary scripts, and too many third-party tools tend to slow things down long before the design does.
3. Test on ordinary connections
Fast on your office Wi-Fi is not the same as fast on a normal phone connection. Real-world testing matters more than ideal conditions.
4. Fix what visitors actually feel
If the page becomes usable quickly, loads in a predictable way, and does not jump around, most visitors will experience it as fast enough.
Where to start
The goal is not a perfect score. The goal is a site that feels responsive enough to keep people moving.