Glossary
What is Cache?
A cache (pronounced "cash") is a high-speed data storage layer that stores a subset of data, so that future requests for that data can be served faster than accessing the original source.
Why Caching Matters in Technical SEO and Performance?
Caching is one of the most powerful tools available for optimizing website speed, which is a critical factor for B2B conversions.
- Lightning-Fast Load Times: Serving cached files drastically reduces page load times for returning visitors, often dropping load times from seconds down to milliseconds.
- Reduced Server Load: By offloading file delivery to the cache, you protect your main server from being overwhelmed during high-traffic events, ensuring the site stays online.
- Core Web Vitals: Google heavily penalizes slow websites. Efficient browser caching directly improves your Lighthouse Score and search engine rankings.
- Bandwidth Savings: It prevents the redundant downloading of heavy assets (like a company logo or global CSS file) every time a user navigates to a new page on your site.
Example from Flowtrix Projects
As part of our Enterprise Webflow service, Flowtrix leverages Webflow’s globally distributed Content Delivery Network (CDN), powered by Fastly. This network automatically handles edge-caching across the globe. This means if a user in Tokyo accesses your SaaS site hosted in New York, the site loads instantly from a cached version on a server in Japan, ensuring a frictionless global user experience.
Categories:
Performance
Infrastructure
Technical
Related Terms:
Master Webflow.
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