24 Feb 2008 12:33:29 | Calin Indre
b>Thousands of companies, tens of thousands of different plans
and only a few of them are really suitable for your web site and
for your online needs.
This is what you are confronted with when choosing a web-hosting
provider. Nowadays being part of the informational revolution
that the Internet has brought along, it is compulsory for a
business and also for individuals. No need to explain here why
having a web site out there on the World Wide Web is such a
must, instead we’re only going to point out a few things related
to choosing an adequate web host for your web site. As
complicated this entire business might seem, once you know what
to look for, it’s really easier to find it.
Analyze your requirements and stick to them
When evaluating their needs in terms of space and bandwidth many
inexperienced web owners often buy more than they will ever
need. As this is unbelievably common, many web-hosting providers
size their web servers taking this into account and actually
over sell the space and bandwidth thinking that customers will
never make full use of it.
To avoid web hosts that result to just that or crowed their web
servers to get an extra profit per customer, simply ask them
their client per server ration. As a diligent buyer, you should
do this with all the other companies you find interesting to do
business with and are eligible to host your web site.
A web site is almost like a living creature. It grows. So try to
leave some room for it, don’t just buy a web-hosting plan that
will fit your needs just perfectly. Buy a little more so when
the time comes to expand you would have the resources available.
Think of the possibility that your initial bandwidth evaluation
proves itself insufficient. You might find yourself in the
position not to be able to use your web site because you have
exceeded your bandwidth. So leave margin for error too.
Most web hosting plans come packed with features and some even
offer pre-installed scripts and programs that might come handy
for both knowledgeable and less knowledgeable web owners. As you
could consider any extra feature a plus, don’t forget to look
for the things you actually need like the OS (Operating System)
or the PHP support. You decide what you need, don’t let the
provider talk you into something you don’t want or is less than
you have expected.
Support – can you get enough of it
Support is something you might overlook when you consider an
offer that suits you in terms of space and bandwidth and is
packed with all the other features you will ever going to need.
It might be good to understand that the road to all those
features goes through Support city. If the web-hosting provider
is careless about the support he offers to his customers, any
technical problem concerning your web site could be solved only
after long hours of waiting and making plenty of irritating
support calls.
To test the quality and the responsiveness of the support
personnel, e-mail them some pre-sales questions. Is the response
fact enough for you? Imagine that your web site is down and your
company is just attending a congress… many clicks are expected,
but is your web site online to get them? Is the response you are
getting from the support team thorough or is it merely
scratching the surface? Is the response easy to understand for
you?
A provider concerned about the quality of his support, would
make available as many as possible ways to communicate with its
clients. So find out as much as you can about its online support
staff, help desk, message boards etc.
Information on the reputation of a web-hosting provider is
something you might find on forums or discussion boards. Any
disgruntled customers there? Would you like to be one?
Reliability is another aspect of the problem. Ask for the uptime
of the company’s web servers. Some hosts offer an uptime
guarantee, usually 99.9% (100% is not a realistic figure in the
computer world). The guarantee means that if your web site is
not available 99.9% of the time, you will be refunded the money
for that month or you will receive free web hosting for a month
as compensation for your web site being unavailable.
Price
Well, true it’s paid web hosting and this means you have to pay
for it. My advice would be don’t try too hard to find the
cheapest possible web host. You will probably end-up wasting an
incredible amount of time and is very likely that within two
weeks after you have bought it, you will stumble upon a better
deal. Apart from the irony of it and the loss of time, cheaper
is not always better.
The other extreme, paying big money to get what you could have
gotten for less is equally bad. At $50 for 200 MB of space with
2 GB of bandwidth you are definitely getting robbed, but the
same service for $5 or $10 is a good deal.
The thin line between a profitable and, why not, enjoyable web
presence and a nightmare with slow server response, unreachable
support and irritating server downtime is drawn by you. By you
choosing the web-hosting provider.
Choose carefully: there can be only a few that will live up to
their promises and deliver for you good quality web hosting!
About Author :
Calin Indre is editor at HostPinPin (www.hostpinpin.com), a
Cheap Web Hosting Directory Resource.