Consumers are less loyal to brands after poor website performance

Digital Desertion: 60 per cent of consumers less loyal to brands after poor website and app performance, survey reveals.

Internet users are growing more demanding and less forgiving, according to the results of a consumer survey from Apica, the performance monitoring and testing experts. In a clear call to action for organizations around the world, Apica’s survey found that three quarters of respondents expect websites and apps to perform faster than they did three years ago.

Apica conducted the survey among internet users in the UK, US and Sweden, to investigate changing attitudes towards a brand’s digital performance. The survey of 2,250 consumers reveals that nearly 40 per cent of us won’t wait more than ten seconds for a website to respond before navigating away. One in nine users (11 per cent) won’t even give a site five seconds before moving onto another website.

See also: The need to prioritise website performance

The survey also finds digital disappointment affects brand loyalty, with 60 per cent of consumers likely to be less loyal towards a brand if they experience poor website or app performance. Ten per cent of participants say they would never return to an offending brand for goods or services. Swedes are least loyal towards a brand that lets them down online, with 73 per cent likely to turn to competitors.

Carmen Carey, CEO, Apica, says, ‘These results demonstrate that digital consumers have limited patience for slow performance or delays. There is clearly a general expectation that sites and apps will perform faster and better, particularly with the advent of born digital organisations. The onus is now on businesses, whether they’re a leading financial company or an online retailer, to ensure peak performance at all times.’

The survey also reveals that users also have limited patience for organisations that schedule maintenance on websites and apps. Less than half (46 per cent) of users said that several hours of downtime was acceptable, and even then, reasons for the downtime had to be properly communicated. Fifty-four per cent of respondents had an ‘upper limit’ of one hour, and more than one in ten (13 per cent) actually expect 100 per cent uptime.

Negative digital experiences are also likely to impact brand reputation with 83 per cent of global respondents reporting they would consider telling colleagues about a poor website or app experience, and almost four in ten would definitely share this.

‘If companies wish to retain both customers and revenue, they must focus on proactive performance testing and monitoring of their digital services to ensure that, even at peak times, downtime does not occur,’ adds Carmen.

Apica monitors ecommerce websites and publishes an annual Black Friday Web Performance Index. Last year, it revealed that whist the top ten eCommerce websites are healthy, the rest are lagging expectations. The 2017 index is due to be published late November after Black Friday and Cyber Monday.

Further reading on website performance

Owen Gough, SmallBusiness UK

Owen Gough

Owen was a reporter for Bonhill Group plc writing across the Smallbusiness.co.uk and Growthbusiness.co.uk titles before moving on to be a Digital Technology reporter for the Express.co.uk.

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