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Page 1 Page 2 Nowadays, anybody can afford to order a
feature-packed web hosting plan for next to nothing;
however, affordable price is not the only criterion
which should be considered when purchasing web hosting
services.
In this article, I'll explain the
basics of what you should look for in choosing a web
hosting company, not just concentrating on the best
price and features, but also on reliability and honesty.
You're investing your money and effort into finding
paying customers and you wouldn't like to lose them in
order to save a few dollars per month on a web hosting
service.
When looking for a web hosting company,
it doesn’t matter if this is just for the inception of a
web or the move of an established site; you need to
consider a large selection of criteria to determine
which company to go with.
Customer support - Website hosting service isn’t just storage or bandwidth.
Based on personal experience and that of others, even a
top-notch service is worthless without customer support.
If you own a business website, your hosting provider
needs to be there for you 24/7 and give you instant
access to the technicians you need to solve your
problem; otherwise, you may end up losing customers and
money.
Downtime guarantee and service
monitoring - Having a personal website go down is a
minor inconvenience; having a business website go down
is a serious matter. What amount of profit would you
lose if your site had been down for a week? Long
downtime may be very harmful to today's companies which
spend large amounts of money on advertising their
websites. Essentially, there are two rules regarding
reliability that one should look at:
1.
You should check if there is an uptime guarantee
offered. A truly service-oriented provider will also
give a money-back guarantee, offering a discount or free
service as compensation for downtime. Any company which
avoids taking responsibility won't put much effort into
the service.
2. I definitely wouldn't go
with a company claiming 100% uptime, as there is no such
thing as a server with 100% uptime. If anyone ever
claims their server has a 100% uptime they are either
lying or they don't perform the necessary upgrades that
prevent a machine from being compromised. Reputable web
hosts will post statistics on their site: What is the
frequency of interruption? How about the average
percentage of downtime? If these aren’t posted, ask; if
the answer isn’t forthcoming, that should be a warning
sign. If you still go with a host which doesn't monitor
servers, you'll have to do the monitoring yourself. I
recommend http://www.siteuptime.com, as it's one of the
best monitoring services available for free in the
market today.
Backups - There is no host
which is safe against different types of technical and
programical failures, so make sure that the company runs
scheduled backups. The other advice would be always
having a backup of your website yourself, as you never
know what might happen. cPanel, which is the most
popular web hosting management software at this time,
has a very comfortable backup-making tool. It allows you
to backup files and databases quickly and easily, so
backups are no longer a problem.
Acceptable
use policy - Web hosts may have 200-300 or more
clients per server; there is no exact number, as
companies have different hardware and each hosted
website has different resource usage. There always is a
possibility that a few of those customers host illegal
content. There are web hosts who have had their servers
unplugged, resulting in their clients’ websites going
down. I'm sure you don't want to put your business at
risk and have your website hosted on the same server
together with illegal pornography and software sites, so
check host's acceptable use policy to find out, if the
host takes care of what's hosted on their servers.
Hosting your site on an uncared-for server will
also result in a low speed. If somebody on the same
server sends spam, the server's IP address will be
blacklisted and you'll have serious problems as
recipients stop receiving your emails. Use the "Spam
database lookup" feature on www.DNSstuff.com to check if
a web hosting company is blacklisted. Spam is being sent
almost everywhere, so having one or two red records
isn't that bad; but, if there are more, it may become a
problem later on.
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