YOU ARE AT:OpinionReality Check: Why your company should load test

Reality Check: Why your company should load test

The top reason your company needs to load test its websites and mobile applications is to learn how the site performs so you can improve the user experience and make smart web infrastructure decisions. Sounds obvious, doesn’t it? Above all else, load testing is a learning experience that provides a wealth of insight into how your website performs from both a user experience and technical perspective.
How can it be done? Running a load test involves creating a small or large number of virtual users via programming script, running a simulation in which those virtual users access your site and gathering information about how well the website performs under the traffic load.

A learning experience: how your website operates and why it matters

If you are curious to learn more about how your website operates, contact a specialized load testing company that offer load tests with up to 50 users for free over a 30-day period. Such a smaller test will provide insight into how well your company’s site performs for a typical user during light traffic situations. Free application monitoring tools can be downloaded if your business does not already have one.
Longer load times hurt conversion rates: according to Amazon.com, every 100 milliseconds of page load time latency reduces sales by 1%. So your business could be losing out on 10% of sales because your pages take a second longer to load. Testers can learn all sorts of interesting things about how a site operates with varying virtual traffic loads.
Primarily, the tests answer the question of how long it takes a page to load on your site for a user at different traffic levels. You can find out how quick load times are during normal, peak, spike and overwhelming use rates.

Finding breaking points and bottlenecks

The load time data not only helps identify problems in your website code that could be slowing down individual pages, but also problems with the infrastructure itself. Load testing lets your business know exactly how much load times increase when the site gets busy relative to normal use. The tests can also determine how much traffic a site’s infrastructure can handle before load times get outrageously high – and when the site will crash.

Proximity performance

A load testing provider can offer testing from server locations all over the globe. A guest in Chicago visiting a site that is hosted in New York City may have fast load times, but Los Angeles-based visitors may have to wait an extra second for pages to load. This data can help your company make an educated decision when purchasing a CDN service that mirrors content so site guests farther away from the original host server have a better experience with your site. Look for a load-testing provider that can offer synthetic load traffic of up to 500 gigabit per second bandwidth and 1 million concurrent virtual users. Loads should be generated to your breaking point, and fast.

Get the ideal amount of power and learn how to scale

Once your business is able to see how your site performs under various traffic loads, that information can help determine where the infrastructure needs upgrades at various traffic levels. This helps with capacity planning – the ability to scale different infrastructure elements to meet demand without wasting money on power that is not going to be used.
Running load tests on your company’s site will teach you invaluable information about how your site works so your customers can have a better experience with your platform. Improved website performance equals improved business.
Sven Hammar is co-founder and CEO of Apica, a provider of powerful, best-in-class technology for testing, monitoring, and optimizing the performance of cloud and mobile applications. Hammar he has decade-long experience and expertise in web performance and web optimization, e-commerce, cloud services, IT entrepreneurship and the internet. He is also a serial entrepreneur who has founded several successful IT companies over the years.
Editor’s Note: The RCR Wireless News Reality Check section is where C-level executives and advisory firms from across the mobile industry share unique insights and experiences.

ABOUT AUTHOR

Reality Check
Reality Checkhttps://www.rcrwireless.com
Subject to editorial review and copy edit, RCR Wireless News accepts bylined thought leadership articles, up to 1000 words, from industry executives. Submitted articles become property of RCR Wireless News. Submit articles to [email protected] with "Reality Check" in subject line.