Blog Post

The Most Used 3rd Party Providers and CDNs on Top Retail Sites

Published
January 9, 2012
#
 mins read
By 

in this blog post

While monitoring the performance of the Internet Retailer Top 50 Retailers this past Holiday Season, we also tracked what third party vendors and CDNs were utilized and measured their impact on each website.  The data collected not only offered insights on what third parties and CDNs are most utilized, but also provided insights on how retailers can optimize the speed of their websites.

Websites rely on various third party vendors for key services like: Managed DNS, Content Delivery, Content Acceleration, Adserving, Analytics, Behavioral Target, Content Optimization, Widgets, etc. For the purpose of this blog post and the study we are referring to “3rd party providers” to companies that deliver content or services on a webpage via an HTML tag.

Top Third Party Providers

3rd Party Provider Distribution on Top 50 Internet Retailers

3rd Party Provider Distribution on Top 50 Internet Retailers

From the data collected on 3rd Party Providers we observed the following interesting points:

  • 3rd Party Providers are thriving – our agents communicated with 161 different 3rd party providers and over 365 unique hostnames during the 123 hour period (Thanksgiving to Cyber Monday)
  • Google/DoubleClick, Google, and Yahoo/RightMedia appeared on about 60% of the sites
  • In two sites we observed Facebook and Akamai Acerno running IPv6 tests (JavaScript based tests to identify if the user supported IPv6 or not).
  • On 21 sites, at least one 3rd party provider was a bottleneck for more than 10% of Document Complete time (for the homepage).

To prevent 3rd party provider impact on the performance of the webpage,  it is highly recommended that sites defer the loading of third party tags until after Onload/Document Complete.  This technique gives precedence to your content, allowing it to load first and mitigating any rendering slowness or errors caused by the third party tags.

CDN Usage

CDN Usage on Top 50 Internet Retailers

CDN Usage on Top 50 Internet Retailers

By looking at the CDN providers across the ecommerce websites and third party vendors we found:

  • Akamai is clearly the “800lb gorilla”, providing service to 64% of the sites.
  • Surprisingly Amazon.com relies on Akamai to deliver the static content, although they offer their own CDN solution, CloudFront.
  • 24 Sites that relied on a CDN did not implement “domain sharding” and delivered static content from a single domain/hostname.

Not using “domain sharding” across two hostnames is a major WPO folly when a site has 10+ static requests. It is a missed opportunity to take advantage of HTTP’s parallel loading capabilities to load content quicker.

In conclusion, third party providers are widely used by retail sites. The top retailers have room to improve their performance by deferring the load of 3rd party tags, and implementing other WPO techniques like “domain sharding”, compression, etc.

– Catchpoint Team

* For various reasons the study excluded the following five companies: Netflix, Blockbuster, 1800 Flowers, Scholastic, and Redcats USA.  In their place, we included Foot Locker, Abercrombie and Fitch, PC Mall, Wayfair, and Crate and Barrel.

Related Articles:

Webpages turning into Airports without Traffic Controller!

Monitoring the Performance of 3rd Party Providers (CDNs, Ad Servers, Widgets…)

3rd Party Monitoring – A process

Monitoring 101: Peeling The Onion

While monitoring the performance of the Internet Retailer Top 50 Retailers this past Holiday Season, we also tracked what third party vendors and CDNs were utilized and measured their impact on each website.  The data collected not only offered insights on what third parties and CDNs are most utilized, but also provided insights on how retailers can optimize the speed of their websites.

Websites rely on various third party vendors for key services like: Managed DNS, Content Delivery, Content Acceleration, Adserving, Analytics, Behavioral Target, Content Optimization, Widgets, etc. For the purpose of this blog post and the study we are referring to “3rd party providers” to companies that deliver content or services on a webpage via an HTML tag.

Top Third Party Providers

3rd Party Provider Distribution on Top 50 Internet Retailers

3rd Party Provider Distribution on Top 50 Internet Retailers

From the data collected on 3rd Party Providers we observed the following interesting points:

  • 3rd Party Providers are thriving – our agents communicated with 161 different 3rd party providers and over 365 unique hostnames during the 123 hour period (Thanksgiving to Cyber Monday)
  • Google/DoubleClick, Google, and Yahoo/RightMedia appeared on about 60% of the sites
  • In two sites we observed Facebook and Akamai Acerno running IPv6 tests (JavaScript based tests to identify if the user supported IPv6 or not).
  • On 21 sites, at least one 3rd party provider was a bottleneck for more than 10% of Document Complete time (for the homepage).

To prevent 3rd party provider impact on the performance of the webpage,  it is highly recommended that sites defer the loading of third party tags until after Onload/Document Complete.  This technique gives precedence to your content, allowing it to load first and mitigating any rendering slowness or errors caused by the third party tags.

CDN Usage

CDN Usage on Top 50 Internet Retailers

CDN Usage on Top 50 Internet Retailers

By looking at the CDN providers across the ecommerce websites and third party vendors we found:

  • Akamai is clearly the “800lb gorilla”, providing service to 64% of the sites.
  • Surprisingly Amazon.com relies on Akamai to deliver the static content, although they offer their own CDN solution, CloudFront.
  • 24 Sites that relied on a CDN did not implement “domain sharding” and delivered static content from a single domain/hostname.

Not using “domain sharding” across two hostnames is a major WPO folly when a site has 10+ static requests. It is a missed opportunity to take advantage of HTTP’s parallel loading capabilities to load content quicker.

In conclusion, third party providers are widely used by retail sites. The top retailers have room to improve their performance by deferring the load of 3rd party tags, and implementing other WPO techniques like “domain sharding”, compression, etc.

– Catchpoint Team

* For various reasons the study excluded the following five companies: Netflix, Blockbuster, 1800 Flowers, Scholastic, and Redcats USA.  In their place, we included Foot Locker, Abercrombie and Fitch, PC Mall, Wayfair, and Crate and Barrel.

Related Articles:

Webpages turning into Airports without Traffic Controller!

Monitoring the Performance of 3rd Party Providers (CDNs, Ad Servers, Widgets…)

3rd Party Monitoring – A process

Monitoring 101: Peeling The Onion

This is some text inside of a div block.

You might also like

Blog post

When SSL Issues aren’t just about SSL: A deep dive into the TIBCO Mashery outage

Blog post

Preparing for the unexpected: Lessons from the AJIO and Jio Outage

Blog post

The Need for Speed: Highlights from IBM and Catchpoint’s Global DNS Performance Study