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Finding the Website Hosting that You
Need By Eric Lester
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The best deal isn't always the cheapest. Shopping for the best website hosting
can be an easier experience if you think about what kind of resources your
website will actually need.
Shopping for website hosting can quickly turn from a careful, measured affair to
a frenzied "how low can you go" price hunt. Recent years have seen the concept
of a "budget hosting" sphere melt away as many large hosts bring prices down to
compete. This does benefit the consumer, as they are more likely to get better
service for their dollar. This article will discuss one of perhaps many sets of
considerations to make in choosing a website hosting company. To those very
serious about their hosting needs, "price" will not be a major factor.
Determine Your Needs
This is the first and most important step. Judging what you need will determine
where to look for hosting services and give you a baseline idea of how much you
should be willing to pay. This very basic step is where the process will break
down if your first instinct is to simply jump online and hunt for the "best
bargain". There are more than enough sites out there that seek to accommodate
the bargain hunters. Perhaps your site is suited to a bargain host, perhaps not.
Knowing the difference is important.
Start with the 2 core attributes of website hosting, space and transfer. Simply,
how large do you expect your site to be and how many people will visit it over a
monthly period. If you're completely new to hosting, you may not be able to
accurately gauge either. That's where you might want to consider actually
creating the site, or as much of it as you can, prior to shopping for hosting.
Knowing the size of the files you plan to upload will give you a basic idea of
the amount of space you need. This will vary wildly depending on the nature of
the site. Small, "hobby" sites won't need a lot of space, sometimes they may not
even use 10 or 20 megs of space. Online stores and sites hosting downloads or
media files will require much more space.
"Transfer", or "Traffic", or sometimes "Bandwidth" on some sites, all generally
equates to the amount of information transmitted to the unique individuals who
view your site over, usually, a monthly period. Some hosts are moving a daily
meter, but most still use a monthly figure. In order to estimate your transfer,
a very simple method is to take the total size of your site files in kilobytes
or megabytes and multiply by the number of visitors you expect. For a number of
reasons, this is not going to be highly accurate, and in many cases will provide
a higher number than your traffic in practice will turn out to be.
Overestimating traffic is always better than underestimating, since you will
always need room to grow with whatever website hosting plan you choose.
What if you have absolutely no idea what size your site will be or how many
people will visit? Well, then start small. Though your dreams of domination the
web might be strong, you will probably not do so immediately. Popularity and
traffic that come with it generally occur over time. Choose a host with a clear
upgrade path, and start with a small plan. You can always upgrade as you get a
better idea of monthly traffic. Pretty much all webmasters hope their traffic
will grow, and a host with a variety of increasingly larger plans is best suited
to handle such growth.
Determine Required Features
Though space and transfer are your core attributes, assessing what kind of
features you need is also important. This may vary with your familiarity with
the web and websites in general. Those who only wish to publish static web pages
with content they intend to update personally do not need any kind of
exceptionally complex feature set. At its most basic level, the WWW is composed
of "HTML" pages, which work on any browser on any kind of computer, be it a
"PC", "Mac", or run by a different operating system. Novices out there can be
assured that HTML pages they create on a PC can be read by someone browsing the
web using a Mac.
If your site goes beyond rudimentary HTML, then you will need to pay attention
to a host's feature set. Sites requiring databases and active scripting have to
be coded using languages your prospective hosting company's servers understand.
There is a variety of options out there, and it is beyond the scope of this
article to go into them, simply be aware of what kind of active scripting you
plan to use and make sure your host supports it. Common alternatives are PHP,
ASP.net, and ColdFusion. Some of the options will vary depending on the type of
server your host uses, most commonly Linux or Windows.
Additional features may also be required. Mailing lists, forum software, and
ecommerce software are common features most hosts support. If you plan on
setting up an online store, find out what kind of shopping cart, if any, a host
provides and be prepared to learn how to use it. Advanced statistics packages
like Urchin are also valuable for ecommerce sites. Map out the kind of features
you plan to deploy with your site and make sure your choice in host makes them
easily available to you.
Support Options
This final component is important, because it is usually the dividing line
between quality hosting and less reputable options. One of the first causalities
of cut-rate hosting is support. Poor support means that low cost you pay each
month isn't worth much because your site is rarely up. Always check your
prospective web host's site support options. Ideally, they will have phone hours
where you can call up and speak directly to first level support. Another "direct
contact" option that is popular these days is "chat." This still allows direct
contact with a live person, only through a chat window on your home computer.
Ideally a combination of both is one sign a host has invested some money in
support.
Bare minimum support options should always include a "help desk" or support
ticketing system. This allows customers to send information about their issue
and have that issue, and all the responses to it, tracked in a central location,
so your support history is always available. Beware any host that only offers an
untracked "email" support. Having all 3, phone, chat, and helpdesk, is a
reasonably good sign a host pays attention to customer support. You can always
"test" these systems prior to signing up by calling or chatting, but, in the
interest of a host's current customers, please keep any conversation brief, as
the intent of a support staff is not, directly, to answer sales questions. Your
test, however brief, has delayed the technician from handling a request from an
existing customer.
Conclusions
Choosing a host is not something to enter into lightly. We've reviewed 3 key
concepts that should be addressed when looking for a web host. "Price" was not
one of them, and, though certainly important for a number of reasons, should
never be the final deciding factor. If your website is important to you, or
mission critical to your business, you want to find a host with an excellent
reputation and high-uptime. Cut-rate or budget hosts rarely obtain either one of
these things. Today, even highly reputable hosts will have "budget offerings"
that can provide stable hosting at reasonable rates. Do your homework and don't
rush to the first "unbelievable deal" you come across. You'll be happier with
your service in the long run.
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About the Author:Mr. Lester has served for 4 years as the webmaster for
ApolloHosting.com and previously worked in the IT industry an additional 5
years, acquirin |