Category: Blogging/Website

  • How to Easily Resize Images and Speed Up Your Site

    How to Easily Resize Images and Speed Up Your Site

    Google and Your Readers Want Both Images and a Speedy-Loading Website – Here’s How

    Do you know how to easily, quickly resize images so the file size (data amount) is not huge, still looks good, and doesn’t slow down your site? It’s really not that techie – I’ll tell you how and give you options for tools to do it.

     

    Why Should You Care About Image Size?

    Your website needs good-looking images. Readers and visitors are attracted to good graphics, and those graphics can help you get the point across in your copy and content.

    But … we also need speedy-loading websites. And images can sloooooooowwww things down.

     

    Google – and your readers – hate when web pages and blog posts are slooooow to load. Slow can mean ‘penalties’ or being lower in Google’s search results (especially in mobile search). Slow can mean more people bounce right off your pages or posts – tired of waiting even a few seconds. Slow can mean lower conversion rates for email opt-ins, sales, etc.

    And slow can mean a few seconds or even half second more than what the tech gods have deemed ‘speedy.’ SEM Rush states your site needs to load in less than 2 seconds to be faster than 75% of the web.  Neil Patel shared a Google report that shows how much those bounce rates go up for just a few seconds of loading time. Ouch.

    (Google told us all back in 2018 it was going to ‘penalize’ sites for slow loading – it started doing so in 2021. Now, with two sites of comparable content, the one that loads faster will show higher in search results. So fix your site speed!)

    A big reason a page or post will be slow to load  = your images.

    Not sure about your site-loading speed?

    Use Google’s own Test My Site tool to test yours. Or use this page speed tool.

    [Uhoh – I have some serious work to do according to Google’s mobile speed check ☹️]

    There are other reasons your site can be slow and you should talk with website and WordPress experts on how to improve your site speed. I highly recommend you talk to my pal, Paul Taubman at Digital Maestro.

    Yes, you can use tools or plugins to compress your images after they are on your site. The tools built in to ThriveSuite that I use will do this for me. Other pals like Smush by WPMU Dev. There are lots of plugin options for image compression.

    But let’s focus right now on one less techie thing we can do before we add plugins to help with image compression AFTER those images on our sites.

    Let’s resize our images before we ever upload them to our website.

    An image that is 2MB or greater is too large in memory or data and taking up too much time to load. Shoot, some sources say even 500kb images are too big.

    You don’t need a file size that huge to still have a good-looking image.

    How-to resize images – what tools to use

    One reputable tool to resize your images, for free – is from Adobe’s Creative Cloud Express here. (psst – Creative Cloud Express includes what used to be Adobe Spark – the competitor/alternative to Canva (affiliate))

    Adobe Creative Cloud Express Free Image Resize App

    Another free cloud tool is Compressjpeg. It has an elephant icon. You can bulk upload up to 20 images at a time.

    I’ve also used and recommended TinyJPG as a cloud-based source to resize images.

    Tiny JPG Image Resize App

    We’re aiming for about a 60-75% reduction in size, with no discernible loss in quality.

    I’ve also used the basic ancient Windows Paint program for years to resize an image. I can tell it what percentage to reduce by or set a pixel by pixel amount.

    I just discovered that for Windows 10 or 11 you can add the PowerToys app (from Windows) and it has image resizer. I can right-click one or more images and resize. If you don’t immediately see the Resizer – click More Options.

    Microsoft Windows PowerToys App Image Resizer Animation

    Wow, potential total game changer! (I have a new Win11 computer and had already added this app – now I have a reason to dig in and use it! Ok, tested it and wow that was fast and easy! It took a 5MB photo down to 200kb easy and quick.)

    As a long-time amateur photographer I have plenty of high-resolution images I took with my DSLR Canon camera. Plus even my iPhone XS photos can run large – not uncommon to have photos 2MB to 4MB (or even larger) in original. Some of the stock images I have purchased over the years also come in higher resolutions and larger file sizes.

    I want to use those images in a blog post, on a sales page, or even make into social-friendly graphics. But they are just too big.

    In addition to the web apps mentioned above, I’ve long used basic, Microsoft Paint to resize images and keep quality high enough for nearly all digital uses. It’s easy to resize even as large as 2000 px and the file size can be 900kb.

    Or take a 2MB photo and resize it for a sales page to 900px square – and boom it’s 370kb.  And still looks fine on the web page.

    Microsoft Paint Resize Dimensions Choice

    I love Canva for creating graphics for all kinds of purposes – but it’s not my first choice for resizing an image prior to editing, manipulating or putting it in a designed graphic. Canva (affiliate) does a good job or resizing those designed images for different uses (e.g. Facebook vs. Instagram vs. Pinterest). Also, you can use to download your Canva (affiliate) creations as a JPG file instead of the default of PNG to make file sizes smaller. JPG images are smaller in data file size while generally still good enough for most web uses.

    But I recommend you resize any of your own or purchased stock images BEFORE you upload them to use in Canva.

    the 5 recommended tools to easily resize images for websites

    Take just a little time before you design graphics for your web pages or blog posts to properly resize your images. It will save you time later and keep your website humming and loading in a speedier fashion.

     

  • Over 100 Ideas for Content Solopreneurs Can Use in Business

    Over 100 Ideas for Content Solopreneurs Can Use in Business

    Solopreneurs Are Busy So It Helps If Someone Gives Us TONS of Content Ideas to Use

    Being a solo business owner means we are ALWAYS busy. Marketing our business to fill up that pipeline of interested prospective clients takes as much or more work than our client projects. But don’t put it off, push it down the to-do list, and don’t think it’s too enormous to handle. Pick something and work on it – marketers are always trying and testing, and so should we solopreneurs.

    I have a few books from Jay Baer on my bookshelf, he’s a smart guy, and I’ve followed his blog, Convince and Convert, since I started my own solo business. He gets that sometimes we run out of ideas on what to talk about to our audiences of potential clients, industry influencers, or social networks. So this guest post from the smart folks at CoSchedule give 105 (WOW!) types of content you could be working on.
    [Note: while the original articles linked are older, most of the content tips included are still relevant and useful. Not every one will apply to you – surely you can find something in 100+ options though!]

    Check Out the List of 100+ Content Ideas to Use In Your Marketing

    So check out the post and pick just ONE type to work on this month. Pick another ONE type next month. Watch your stats and results. Do more of what works.

    Psst – when in doubt, start with #1 – List Posts. They still rule the internet for good reason.

    I you are a service-business solopreneur, or a consultant, or have plenty of medium-sized businesses – you should definitely work on #6, Case Studies.

    Some Content Ideas That Caught My Eye

    Who wouldn’t want to create “unicorns of refreshingly unique marketing“?!  🦄

    This was an example of #45 on Baer’s list, for using illustrations. He points to how CoSchedule uses custom illustrations to highlight the main points of its posts – such as the one on unicorns of marketing. Thankfully, we can use tools like Canva to create illustrations with zero drawing skills needed.

    Screen shot with illustration of unicorn on CoSchedule article on unicorns of marketing

     

    #4 is a WHY post or piece of content – for example, why something is the way it is in your niche or industry. I may have followed that format when I created a page explaining what licensed or PLR content is, and what online, digital bundles sales are and why they are good for small businesses. Those pieces also answered common questions my solo pals have asked so that could be content type #3 too!

    And I used #79 webinars for nearly three years (I gave monthly webinars with explorations of marketing tech at Marketing Tool Talk – we’re on hiatus with the tool talk webinars right now, but you can get tool tips in my regular emails)

    I’ve come to appreciate that content format – and tip #44GIFs, are actually one of my love languages. I so appreciate a good GIF! I use them in my emails often, as posts or conversation starters in my Mighty Marketing Mojo Facebook Group, as comments on posts, and even as messages of appreciation or encouragement among my biz pals.

    Minions You Rock

    In the years since I first came across this list of content ideas I’ve used dozens of the content types, in different formats or on different platforms with Mighty Marketing Mojo. I keep a running file (and Trello board) of questions from my community and clients – tip #3 – and I use those for Facebook Live video chats, for emails, for creating workshops and more. I share personal stories (tip #19) in nearly every email I send. I regularly encourage my community to talk about misconceptions, mistakes, and failures as they build critical elements of trust and relationship with their community (tip #22 is on failures).

    See, this isn’t that hard after all!

    Go pick one, and then two or three, types of content to focus on for the next 30-90 days. Practice, publish, repeat, see what works. You CAN do this solo pals!

    Don’t forget, I share tips like these in my email newsletters.
    So make sure you’re getting all the solopreneur marketing help you can. Get my picks on top social media tools!

    10 Tools for Social Media Success

    Sign up below to get ​your FREE guide to my favorite time-saving, budget-friendly social media tools for solopreneurs!

     

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