4 Solutions to Improvise Responsive Website Design Performance

Today, smartphones and tablets are no longer considered as accessories. In fact, these have become necessities required along with food, clothing and shelter. People searching for a pin or a pizza; prefer to look for it on the internet. This efficient source provides all details, reviews and helps them compare prices. Ecommerce websites receive at least 37% of the web traffic from the handheld devices. However, 61% of the Americans like to buy products using their smartphones or tablets.


Therefore the eCommerce world has begun restructuring their web site designing. It has become mandatory for the websites to have flexible designs, which can squeeze or expand according to the different screen sizes. Therefore, responsive website design (RWD) is an ideal solution for the multi-screens available across the globe.

RWD is still in the research and development (R&D) phase. Furthermore, many users have reported concerns related to its performance. The reasons that deteriorate the performance are larger file sizes, compression, and a frequent image resizing according to the screens. In addition to this, such designs use the same HTML elements for loading onto different devices. That means, the images, graphics, scripting, content, etc. are loaded without considering the screen on which it is viewed. Hence, the web users get the full desktop page on mobile devices as well as on the 56 inch screen. This results in increasing the loading time by slowing down the performance.

Mobile users leave the page that takes more than 3 seconds to load. Therefore, to pace up with modernization, here are few solutions provided to improve the performance of the responsive web design (RWD).

Solution 1

Once the web design is complete, designers should use efficient web performance tools for optimizing the design. Optimization is the process that helps designers to alter the web pages accordingly. Furthermore, the designers have to make sure that the resources such as CSS and JavaScript are sent directly to the targeted devices in a compressed form without asking the users to wait for the document object model (DOM) to load.

Tools: Use ‘Mobitest tool’ for optimization, ‘Compass tool’ for CSS resources, and ‘UGlifyJS tool’ for JavaScript compression.

Solution 2

Consider the conditional loading techniques. Users visit a website to get information related to specific products or services. Therefore, restrict the unnecessary download of graphical structures, web elements, images, maps, content, and other resource codes, this would help sites to load faster on the different devices. Moreover, the conditional loading is an effective way that helps in reducing the bounce rates.

Solution 3

Use PHP Adaptive Images, which scale down the large images into embedded HTML images – without creating a need to change the markup. The software (Adaptive Images) detects the screen sizes and makes the changes automatically. It uses an htaccess file, PHP file and a single line of JavaScript for verifying the different screen sizes.

Solution 4

Use a Fit Text tool for wrapping the texts naturally on different devices. This tool helps in narrowing or expanding the texts easily, this increases the performance. Additionally, use jQuery plug-in that auto-adjusts the font size (when texts are minimized or maximized) according to the screen sizes.

When building a responsive design for your business website, always implement the aforementioned solutions to improve the performance.

Author Bio:

Mr. Deepak Gupta is a well known web design blogger who is benefiting design industry from last several years through his quality articles. In this article, he is discussing about how responsive web design helpful for the performance of the website.

29 Aug 2014

Myths that Represent Everything that’s Wrong With Web-Designing Perceptions

Sometimes, you end up making a lot of false web-designing assumptions that…

jQuery Plugins with Backbone
18 Jul 2021

jQuery Plugins with Backbone – Articles List Shedding the Light…

We don’t think that web developers among our readers don’t know what…

Written by

Allison Reed

Allison is a professional SEO specialist and an inspired author. Marketing manager by day and a writer by night, she is creating many articles on business, marketing, design, and web development. Follow her on LinkedIn and Facebook.

1 Comments

  • Stefan Salvatore
    December 10, 2013

    good.. I like your blog. I think it will help me in web design.

Post Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Managed by Quantum VXenon