Here's an overview of your websites health score. Check below for the issues you should sort first.
Tested on Mobile, May 14, 2026 at 10:00 AM
+4% vs Average
90
Your score64
Industry Avg.Website Performance
-12% vs Average
56
Your score56
Industry Avg.Accessibility
Matches Avg.
29
Your score29
Industry Avg.Best Practices
Score Guide
90+
Good
50-89
Needs Improvement
0-49
Poor
Industry Comparison:
Want to compare your scores to your industries average? Select your industry from the dropdown.
Your result isn't unusual. That's exactly the problem, and your opportunity.
Most New Zealand based business websites are sitting in the same underperforming middle range. Our performance study found only 11% of NZ websites scored in Google's Good range, which means 89% of businesses are leaving a lot on the table.
Since your competitors are likely sitting in the same weaker range, this isn't just a problem to fix. It's an opportunity to separate your business ahead of your market.
Website Performance
Your website performance score is in the Needs Improvement range. This means your site is still usable but it likely causing enough friction to slow people down, weaken momentum towards conversion, and make the experience feel inefficient or clunky.
That matters most for first-time visitors, mobile users, and anyone arriving from marketing traffic.
64
Here's what we'd usually expect from a website in this range:
Conversion/Lead Risk
Slower loading, delayed interactions, and unstable pages give visitors more chances to hesitate or leave before they enquire or buy.
Trust & First Impressions
A modern, tidy looking website can still feel clunky. That weakens confidence fast, especially for first-time visitors judging your credibility.
Wasted Traffic
If you're investing in SEO, Paid Ads, or Social Traffic, weak website performance means more of that traffic leaks away before it converts or becomes a lead.
Accessibility
Your accessibility score is in the Needs Improvement range. This suggests there are parts of your site that may be harder to read, navigate, or use than they should be.
This isn't just about edge cases or compliance. Having good website accessibility is about creating a site that everyone can use and requires less effort overall, especially for mobile-users.
64
Here's what we'd usually expect from a website in this range:
Harder To Use
Low contrast, unclear labels, and poor structure make the site more difficult to scan, read, and act on. You have to remember, not everyone uses websites quite like you do or prefer.
More Effort for Mobile Users
Accessibility issues often overlap with mobile usability problems, which means more visitors have to work harder than they should.
Weaker Confidence
When a site feels awkward, inconsistent or hard to use, it immediately damages trust even if visitors never consciously say so.
Best Practices
Your Best Practices score is in the “Needs Improvement” range. This usually points to technical shortcuts, maintenance gaps, or avoidable issues sitting underneath your website.
These may not always be obvious to visitors straight away, but they often make the website more fragile, harder to maintain, and prone to future issues.
64
Here's what we'd usually expect from a website in this range:
Technical Fragility
The site may be relying on outdated methods, bloated scripts, or weaker technical foundations that make it less reliable over time.
Higher Risk of Breaks
Weak technical practices often increase the change of bugs, hacks, odd browser behaviour, or issues appearing as the site grows.
Harder Future Improvements
The messier the foundation, the harder it becomes to improve performance, add new features, or scale the site properly later when you need to.
You've already seen enough to know if this is not something to ignore. The next step is deciding how far you want to take the diagnosis and what kind of plan you need from here.
Who is this best for:
Businesses that want expert guidance before spending money on the wrong fix.
What you'll walk away with:
Who is this best for:
Businesses that want to know what to fix first before spending money on the wrong changes.
What you'll walk away with:
Who is this best for:
Businesses with weaker scores, older websites, or signs that the issues go beyond a few obvious fixes.
What you'll walk away with:
We've created a short questionnaire to help us understand your needs and better understand your project. This will only take a few minutes.
Question 1
1 / 9
What industry are you in?
Have a question, project, or not sure where to start? Get in touch with our expert team who are dedicated to help businesses grow.