Resource: Shrink & resize your images for a better, faster Squarespace website
Change & update images without bloating & slowing down your Squarespace website
Introduction to optimising images for Squarespace
Changing and upload images is a routine task in the lifetime of a website, but important. It helps keep your website on brand, but also feeds in to Search Engine Optimisation (SEO).
The steps are relatively straightforward, but repetitive, so building a workflow can be helpful. This is why we’ve laid out the key steps below to help you with your site maintenance and updates.
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Key principles to remember when optimising images for Squarespace
Uploading lots of images with a large file size (over 1MB) will slow your website down over time, and impact visitors’ experience and your Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) performance
Although not critical, adding concise, descriptive alt tags to images feeds in positively to your SEO performance over time and within a thought-through strategy
How to add images to Squarespace
Log in via squarespace.com/login or your built-in domain https://www.YOURDOMAIN.squarespace.com/config/
Find your site in your Account Dashboard and click the ‘edit site’ button on the thumbnail image of your site
Using the Home Menu on the left or live preview panel on the right, navigate to the area where you want to update an image
Find the edit menu for the image or section and click to enter edit mode
For images in banners or section headers, click ‘banner’ to edit
To remove an image, click the ‘bin’ icon
To replace the former image, click ‘upload an image’ to add a new image from your computer
See below on how to optimise your images
Once uploaded, add a short, descriptive sentence in the field titled ‘Filename (Optional)’ (the alt tag for the image)
See below on how to write your alt tags
When you are happy, click the ‘apply’ button at the bottom
Double check you are happy and then click the ‘save’ button for the section to save your work
Squarespace image optimisation step by step checklist
First, to help with your admin, collate all your images and put them together in a folder on your computer or cloud folder
Using Adobe Photoshop or an online image resizing app (such as squoosh.net), upload images one by one or in batches
Reduce the image width to between 1500px and 2500px, if possible
Compress the image file size to below 500 KB - below 300KB is ideal, but ensure to double-check the quality
Save the compressed file to a separate folder with a short, helpful descriptive filename (see below for pointers on filenames)
Upload your chosen images to your Squarespace website and the ‘Filename (Optional)’ field (alt tag) will be populated automatically
To save time by batch processing images with Adobe Photoshop, check out further resources via a Google search
Best practice with Squarespace filenames & alt tags
An alt tag is the piece of text that is displayed when a browser is unable to display an image
It also helps search engines scan and analyse the content of a page
The filename of an image often acts as the alt tag if one is not specified
Alt text is also used for those with access needs, so needs to be short and readable
Pointers for alt tags in Squarespace
Write them for humans so that they can be understood at a glance
Use proper sentences although you can omit definite and indefinite articles (‘a’ and ‘the’)
Don’t include ‘image of’ or ‘photo of’, as screen readers automatically introduce images, making the text superfluous
Remember the keywords for your business and include them if appropriate, but avoid keyword stuffing
Keep the length of the alt tag to no more than 125 characters or 12 words
Use a character counter like lettercount.com
Or the new Character Counter Tool from Originality.ai, which uses AI to edit the text to your target length
It uses AI to adjust the text you enter to hit your target character or word count, plus it highlights the characters once you go over a limit that you can set
Further reading on alt tags for your Squarespace website
‘Alt Text’ from Moz
‘Accessibility: Image Alt text best practices’ from SiteImprove
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