Google's real-user Core Web Vitals assessment for the origin is failing — the site is classified SLOW on field data, the first thing a performance-aware buyer (or Google ranking) registers (measured via PageSpeed Insights / CrUX, 2026-06-19).
Every real-user tap or click takes more than half a second to visibly respond — past Google's 500ms "poor" cutoff (good is ≤200ms), so interacting with inventory, search, and forms feels laggy (measured via PageSpeed Insights / CrUX, 2026-06-19).
Content jumps around as the page loads — more than 5× Google's 0.10 "good" threshold and well into the "poor" range — the kind of instability that makes a visitor misclick or lose their place (measured via PageSpeed Insights / CrUX, 2026-06-19).
These are CrUX field numbers (real Chrome-user data), not a one-off lab snapshot — meaning actual Peach State visitors are experiencing this lag and layout instability in the wild, not just a synthetic test (measured via PageSpeed Insights / CrUX, 2026-06-19).
An illustrative redesign that resolves each measured finding below. Concept art — not a live build or quoted scope.