What Our Experts Found
Here is what each specialist found on breezeline.com.
Your website takes over 5 seconds to fully render its largest content element, which is well above the 2.5 second threshold Google recommends. The first contentful paint at 2.8 seconds means visitors are staring at a blank or partially loaded screen for nearly 3 seconds before they see anything meaningful. This slow load time is a direct result of render-blocking resources and unoptimized images.
Every second of delay costs you visitors. Research shows 53% of mobile users abandon a site that takes longer than 3 seconds to load. With a total blocking time of 620ms, your site feels sluggish even after it appears to load, because the main thread is tied up processing JavaScript.
Defer non-critical JavaScript, compress and lazy-load images below the fold, and consider implementing a content delivery network to serve assets from edge locations closer to your visitors.
Measured using Google Lighthouse, the same tool Google uses to evaluate website performance.
Slow loads cost conversions. We fix it.
Slow load times cost conversions. We eliminate the bloat.
Your website has a responsive layout that adapts to mobile screens, but the experience is not fully optimized. Touch targets for buttons and links are too small in several areas, making it difficult for mobile users to navigate accurately. The mobile navigation menu is functional but feels cramped on smaller screens.
A cumulative layout shift score of 0.18 means elements on your page are moving around as it loads. This is frustrating for visitors who try to click a button only to have it shift position. Images without defined dimensions and dynamically loaded content are the primary causes.
The path from landing on your site to finding plan information or contacting support requires too many clicks. Streamlining the user journey and making key actions more prominent would improve the overall visitor experience.
Measures Core Web Vitals (CLS, INP) using the same metrics Google uses for search ranking.
Great UX is designed, not patched.
A great visitor experience is designed, not patched together.
Several accessibility gaps were identified that could prevent visitors with disabilities from fully using your website. Missing ARIA labels on interactive elements, insufficient color contrast in some text areas, and form inputs without proper labels are the most common issues.
Navigation menus and interactive components lack the ARIA attributes that screen readers need to properly announce content. This affects not just visitors with visual impairments but also those using voice navigation or alternative input devices.
Some text elements, particularly in lighter colored sections, do not meet WCAG AA contrast requirements. This affects readability for all visitors, not just those with visual impairments, especially on mobile devices in bright environments.
Evaluates compliance with WCAG 2.1, the legal standard for web accessibility under the ADA.
Accessibility fixes built into every site.
Accessibility fixes are built into every site we deliver.
Your website is missing several critical conversion elements that turn casual browsers into paying customers. There is no prominent call to action above the fold, contact forms are buried deep in the navigation, and there is no social proof or trust indicators near decision points.
For an internet service provider, the primary conversion goal is getting visitors to check availability or request a quote. These CTAs should be the most prominent elements on every page, yet they are currently secondary to general content. Adding a zip code checker prominently in the hero section would dramatically improve lead capture.
Based on your current traffic, even a modest improvement in conversion rate from fixing these issues could translate to significant additional revenue. The combination of faster load times, better mobile experience, and stronger CTAs creates a compounding effect on customer acquisition.
Evaluates call-to-action placement, form usability, and mobile conversion patterns against industry benchmarks.
More visitors into customers. By design.
Turn more visitors into customers with a site designed to convert.
Your site uses HTTPS properly, which is the baseline for visitor trust. However, several security headers are missing that modern browsers use to protect visitors from common attacks. Content Security Policy, X-Frame-Options, and Permissions-Policy headers should all be configured.
Some resources are still being loaded over HTTP instead of HTTPS, which can trigger browser warnings and erode visitor trust. These mixed content issues are straightforward to fix by updating resource URLs.
With increasing privacy regulations, ensuring your cookie consent mechanisms and data handling practices are transparent builds trust with visitors and keeps you compliant with evolving standards.
Scans for SSL configuration, security headers, and mixed content following OWASP security standards.
Modern architecture, fewer vulnerabilities.
Modern architecture means fewer vulnerabilities and no plugin risks.
Your SEO foundations are relatively solid, with proper meta tags and a crawlable site structure. However, there are missed opportunities in structured data markup that could help Google better understand your service offerings and display rich results in search.
For a regional internet service provider, local SEO is critical. Your Google Business Profile integration and local schema markup could be stronger. Competitors in your service areas are likely capturing local search traffic that should be going to you.
Your page titles and meta descriptions are functional but not optimized for click-through rates. Rewriting these with stronger calls to action and clearer value propositions could improve your organic click-through rate without changing your rankings.
Checks against ranking factors documented in Google's Search Quality Guidelines.
Better rankings start with better architecture.
Better rankings start with a site built for SEO.







