Optimizing Wordpress installations gives the clients and individuals who use your sites the performance, speed, and flexibility they’ve come to expect with WordPress. Whether you’re managing a personal site or a suite of installations for various clients, taking the time to optimize your WordPress installations increases efficiency and performance.
In this tutorial, you’ll explore how to optimize WordPress installations in a way that’s built for scale, including guidance on configuration, speed, and overall performance.
This is a conceptual article sharing different ways to approach optimization of a WordPress installation on Ubuntu 20.04. While this tutorial references the use of a managed solution via our WordPress 1-Click App, there are many different starting points, including:
Whichever you choose, this tutorial will start with the assumption that you have or are prepared to install a fully-working WordPress installation configured with an administrative user on Ubuntu 20.04.
During the installation and creation of your WordPress installation there are a few variables to take into account, including the location of your potential users, the scope of your WordPress site or suite of sites, and the maintenance and security preferences set that allow your site to be continually optimized. Taking the time to dive into each thoughtfully before building out your site will save time and benefit your WordPress installation as it grows.
The first step in optimizing your WordPress site is to have a deep understanding of how you intend to use and grow your site. Will it be one site, or a network of sites? Is your site a static or dynamic website? Answering these questions before setting up your installation can inform some of your initial decisions regarding hosting, storage size, and performance.
For example, if you’d like to build a personal blog, caching and optimizing images and visual content is important to consider. If you intend to create a community or ecommerce site with concurrent visitors and frequently changing data, considerations for server resources should be made. Being thoughtful about your intention for your WordPress installation from the start will guide the usefulness of security and performance tweaks made to your site, and lend to an overall more efficient installation.
There are a few preferences that are important to consider while installing WordPress that can reduce latency and increase performance on your site.
First, select a hosting provider that provides the latest WordPress, Apache, MySQL, and PHP software with firewall and SSL certificate capabilities. A reliable and modern hosting provider will give you the best start for your LAMP
stack installation. With shared hosting, be aware of server usage and customers per server to ensure the best performance for your site. Choosing the right hosting provider for your needs will help you prevent downtime and performance errors.
Be aware of the location of your servers or datacenters when starting a new WordPress installation, and choose the location that best suits the need of your site and general location of your visitors and users. Latency, the time it takes for data to be transmitted between your site and users, fluctuates based on location. The Wordpress documentation on site analytic tools explains how to track visitor location data, as well as the number of visits to your site. Having an idea from the start about where your visitors are from can help determine where to host your site and provide them with a faster browsing experience.
There are a wide range of available themes that can be used or customized for WordPress. Many themes can be configured with user-friendly drag and drop interfaces, integrated with custom plugins and more. When setting up your WordPress site, it’s a good idea to initially consider only the essential features that you’ll use for the lifecycle of your site, adding more as you grow.
Starting with a lightweight theme can help your installation to load more efficiently. A theme will require fewer database calls and by keeping your site free of unnecessary code, your users will have fewer delays in site speed and performance.
For any theme selected, be sure to turn off or disable any features offered with the theme that you won’t need or use. These can be preferences offered in the Appearance section of the WordPress dashboard, typically under Theme Editor or Customize. Turning off features you don’t use reduces the number of requests and calls happening to query for data in the background.
While there are a number of free and paid options for WordPress themes available online, many use page builders that add excess shortcode and unused code that will affect the performance of your site. Consider your use case when deciding whether or not to use a page builder, as they typically include a lot of extra processes that will have an impact on your site’s speed.
WordPress plugins offer extended functionality for WordPress installations through added code that allows users to customize their installations to suit their specific needs. There are over 56,000 currently available plugins, making them an appealing way to add additional features to a WordPress site.
While plugins can increase the efficiency of your site, care should be taken in selecting quality plugins that are maintained and updated regularly. Because many plugins not only add code to your site but entries to your WordPress installation’s database, using too many plugins may cause site speed issues over time.
Once you have installed all of the plugins, widgets, and additional features you’d like to add to your WordPress installation, there are a few more optimization options to try within the WordPress dashboard that could positively impact your site’s speed and performance.
First, be sure to change your site’s login address. Because most WordPress administrative login pages end in /wp-admin
, this page is often prone to attacks. There are a number of tools available that enable you to change your login URL — be sure to select the one that works best for your use case.
Next, consider the Site Health tool, located in the Tools section of your WordPress dashboard:
Consider the results shown, and follow the instructions found in each dropdown on the Status tab to improve security or performance as mentioned within the tabs.
Using the built-in configuration offered in the WordPress dashboard ensures that you’ve covered all of the readily available configuration tweaks for your installation.
Caching can also help improve your WordPress site’s performance and speed. Caching, a core design feature of the HTTP protocol meant to minimize network traffic while improving the perceived responsiveness of the system as a whole, can be used to help minimize load times when implemented on your site. WordPress offers a number of caching plugins that are helpful in maintaining a snapshot of your site to serve static HTML elements, reducing the amount of PHP calls and improving page load speed.
In this tutorial you explored a number of different techniques that you can use to make your WordPress installation on Ubuntu 20.04 faster and more efficient. Following the suggestions in this tutorial will help ensure that your site’s performance isn’t an issue as you grow in users and content on your site.
Thanks for learning with the DigitalOcean Community. Check out our offerings for compute, storage, networking, and managed databases.
WordPress powers over 33% of the web and is a trusted, open source content management system that is unparalleled in performance and extendability. In this series, learn more about WordPress and how to install, configure, and optimize WordPress sites.
This textbox defaults to using Markdown to format your answer.
You can type !ref in this text area to quickly search our full set of tutorials, documentation & marketplace offerings and insert the link!