Choosing
the right Web Hosting Company
With thousands of
web hosting companies in the market it can be difficult if not
impossible to know which web site hosting companies truly provide an
excellent hosting solution at an excellent
price.
When you have an established domain name with a good web
hosting company, you can get reports on your traffic and
which of your pages your customers are visiting most often, as well as
many other statistics. Your web host will
charge you a fee for monthly service that ranges from $10 or $20 to the
more expensive $50.00 per month.
Plan to pay between $300 and $500 per year to your
web host. Always avoid free or very inexpensive web
hosting services, because you may experience bouts of server downtimes
and you are likely to have significant
limitations in storage, number of email addresses, FTP upload etc.
Be sure your web host can accommodate e-commerce
and storefronts, wireless capability, bogs, forums, chats,
online interactive helps and anything else you want to add onto your
site.
Estimate what your growth needs are and ensure that this web
host can serve you as you grow.
The last thing you want to do is change host mid way unless
you absolutely have to do so. Check your bandwidth
capability to be sure that, if your website traffic grows rapidly, your
customers will not have to wait to download
or view information. Three things to look for in a web hosting company
are:
1. Excellent Customer Support: Your hosting provider should
be there for you 24/7 and give you instant access to
the technicians you need to solve your problem. Ask them how long it
takes for them to typically respond to your
problem. A good test is to call them in the mid night to check if you
get to a live, level 3 support.
2. A Sound Infrastructure: Check whether they offer a
multi-homed network powered by multiple bandwidth providers
to ensure redundancy. Some offer a 100% guarantee on its network
availability or network uptime.
3. Financial Stability: If you're running very critical
operations, you can't afford to be with a hosting company
that may not be in business in a few months.
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