
Determining the best web hosting company for you is critical to your web site’s success. Whether it is for business, e-commerce, a fan site or just a hobby, the host you choose plays a large factor on how well you’ll fare in the online world. In such a flooded market with so many different hosting companies and packages out there, how do you know who to trust with your site? You want a reliable company that will make sure your site is always available, you want a support department that actually exists and can help you quickly, but of course it needs to be affordable and fit into your budget, especially if your web site isn’t intended to generate any income.
Knowing your requirements is the first step in finding the best host for you. Try to determine how much disk space your site is going to require, how your site will deliver its content such as static pages like HTML or dynamic automated content via scripts like wordpress or Joomla, and of course how many visitors you are expecting to visit monthly to gauge how much bandwidth you will need. If you already have a website, you should know most of this information, if you are just creating your website and have no idea, don’t sweat it. If you are just starting out chances are you will need less then 500MB of disk space, and 5,000-10,000MB (5-10GB) of bandwidth should be sufficient for a starter. It you plan on running a personal blog or a message board, make sure the package you choose has access to a database, it’s best to pick a host that allows you at least three databases. Most hosting companies have a small basic package that should work well for the time being. If you plan to mass market your website or run a business or ecommerce site you may have a higher bandwidth requirement. Always check with potential web host’s to make sure you have growth potential. So if your website out grows your hosting package you can always move up to something with more room.
Next you are going to need to determine your budget. How much can you financially afford or are willing to spend on web hosting? Figure this out before you shop for a host, don’t let a host decide your budget for you. Remember, you want a reliable web host that gives your site good uptime but offers you support should you experience a problem. Running reliable and stable servers can be expensive and so can staffing a support department 24/7. So make sure you have a practical budget that takes this into account. Do not waste your hard earned money on hosts that offer you the world for a buck or two, it will only lead to heart ache. For a basic plan with 500MB – 2,000MB storage space and 5,000MB – 10,000MB bandwidth you should expect to pay around at minimum $6USD for a good host. However, hosts that sell their plans at this price are not necessarily a good host.
Do not be fooled by marketing gimmicks, flashy web sites or statements made on a web site! The biggest problem in the hosting industry today is the UNLIMITED sales pitch. No host worth their salt is going to offer you up unlimited everything. It’s not possible. Web servers are simply “heavy-duty” computers that use RAM and Hard drives just like your home PC or laptop. When is the last time you bought a computer with an “UNLIMITED” hard drive? As for bandwidth, sure, it could be unlimited, but only if you have unlimited money. Hosts that offer unlimited disk space and bandwidth generally “oversell” their servers. This means they can pile hundreds of customers on one server. They sell the same storage space and bandwidth they sold you, to other customers as well. What they offer you is not dedicated only to you, but to everyone. If you try to start using that unlimited space and store 25GB of files or use that unlimited Bandwidth using over 200GB a month, you will soon find your site shut for “abuse”. You see, a huge secret in the hosting rules is the TOS known as the terms of service. Some hosts will state unlimited on their sites and in the TOS they declare unlimited as 500MB or something similar. They may also limit you to what you can store on your site, saying you are only allowed to have html files. No images, videos, or anything. Sure you can upload these files and use them, but if you use that disk space and bandwidth they will shut you down and claim abuse because you uploaded files that were not allowed. Unlimited hosts have a lot of dirty tricks like this up their sleeves always stipulated in their TOS.
Look for a host that is upfront about your limits. For a personal website, small business or hobby site 1000MB (1GB) is plenty of disk space and you should be more then fine with 10,000MB (10GB) of bandwidth. As your site becomes more popular you will use more bandwidth and when the time comes you can upgrade your package to include more bandwidth. All hosts include a control panel where you can track your disk and bandwidth usage so you know what you are actually using.
Okay so we got your requirements, your budget and what hosts to look out for. Now it’s time to actually find your potential hosting company. You may have a web companies in mind, which is great. If not ask around with friends and family to see if they can recommend anyone or someone to avoid. Do a Google or yahoo search if you are up to it, you will find hundreds of thousands of potential web hosts. Generally in the top results on Google are “Hosting review sites” they can provide you with helpful information in narrowing down hosts, but always take the reviews with a grain of salt. These sites are often paid to post certain kinds of reviews by the hosts themselves or they are linked to affiliate systems where they get paid if you sign up with a particular host. However you find your possible hosts is up to you.
Once you have a list of web hosts you are interested in, it’s time to research them and evaluate them. First make sure they offer a package that meets your budget. Then contact the hosting company, email the sales department or submit a sales ticket in their customer support panels this should be easy to find. Let them know you are a potential client, and you are interested in their services. Ask them any questions that may be on your mind, or to clarify what exactly their hosting packages include, ask about their uptime, response time to support tickets and so on. If all else fails simply ask them that if you out-grew your plan, if you could easily upgrade to a bigger one. Generally the answer should be yes, but what you are actually testing here is their response time. You want to see how long it takes for a host to respond to your inquiry. This is a good test to tell how fast their support could be. Also try to submit a support ticket, you should be able to email support@hostingcompaniesname.com or enter a support ticket via their website. Sometimes they will reply to sales tickets faster to get a new customer then reply to current customers needing support. So always check this out. When you submit a support ticket be honest and just say you are a potential client and wanted to test out the support response time. Try this at different times of the day and night to see if they truly offer ‘round the clock support, this may be important should your site crash at 1AM.
Next do a Google search on them, enter the companies name and then add review to the end (example: hostingcompaniesname.com review) this should pull up at least a few reviews that should help you know what you are getting into with this company. Remember always take reviews with a grain of salt. Even very reputable companies will have a bad or negative review. Try to find as many reviews as you can.
Check out their guarantees, many hosting companies offer a 15, 30 or even 45 day satisfaction guarantee. This means you can try them out for that amount of time. If you don’t like them, you can get a full refund and find a new host! Always make sure to find and read the fine print on these offers to make sure there are no catches that could bilk you out of a refund should you not like their service. Also make a note to find out whether or not a host has an uptime guarantee, this will give you a rough guide on how much downtime you could expect from a hosting company, this means how often your site *may* be inaccessible. Industry standard is generally 99.9% this means your website *could* be down for as long as 45 minutes in a month. Be wary of hosts that say their uptime is 100% as it’s a fact of technology that something will at some point fail and need to be repaired or replaced. Avoid any host that offers a 95% uptime guarantee because 95% means your site could be down for as much as 30hours a month! This is not acceptable it today’s standards.
Look for additional or bonus features. Some hosting companies offer extra’s like a free website builder tool, one click script installation for many useful programs like bulletin boards, word press, and many other things. Keep an eye out for extra’s like $25 or $50 worth of free advertising credits on sites like Google’s adwords or facebook advertising.
See whether or not the company backups your website. Should their server fail or hard drive crash, your site is gone! If they have backups at least you know in an event of a disaster they will have a backup of your site for you. On this note, always make sure you backup your own website. I cannot stress enough on how important it is to backup your own website. Never rely on anyone else to do it for you. Some companies may claim they do this for you then when a disaster hits, they don’t have your backup and your site is gone. Or should you happen to wake up one to find your website and your host has disappear or gone out of business, you will have minimal downtime because you have your site backed up. This is a MUST for EVERY web site owner. Having the hosting company do it for you is only an added benefit and the third backup just in case.
If you follow these steps, use a little common sense and understand that no one can offer you unlimited anything, especially for a few bucks a month, you are well on your way to finding a good, solid host that will serve you well for years to come.
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#1 by Dominic on February 4th, 2010
you may find it there
http://www.allwebhostings.net
it has compared top 10 web hosting companies in a chart and will show the most reliable and affordable web hosting company
it has reviews for each web hosting company that will really help you to find the best web hosting provider company
and there are lots of articles about web hosting and internet.
S kfk3 hr3
#2 by nacao on February 4th, 2010
Lol, well then according to OVH’s terms of service you should be paying more!
My discussions with them they said i would have to move up to a premium traffic plan if i use in excess of the 5TB range….
Also… if you look at my calculations above the connection will only allow a max of just over 1TB a day… :p
And OVH provide 100mbps per CLIENT not per server unless you pay more.
#3 by guzen on February 4th, 2010
ya, take a look, cheap webhosting Tinyurl(DOT)com/ybochbk
#4 by CrazyFace on February 4th, 2010
The short answer is that you shouldn't run web hosting out of your house. Even with significant upgrades to your setup, you likely will lack the infrastructure to adequately provide for any significant amount of website traffic. And if you are having to ask here how to set one up, then you almost certainly will not have the tools to properly maintain and support it.
A better bet is to become a reseller for an existing host, like GoDaddy — http://www.godaddy.com/gdshop/wwd_landing.asp.You can make money, handle clients, and offer a lot more than you'd be able to putting it together yourself. And if there's a technical issue, you have a resource to use instead of being on your own.
If you want something more hands-on, you can rent a server from a place like The Planet — http://www.theplanet.com/ — that provides you a server to host on with an admin system like Plesk that is more hands-on as far as setting up accounts and sites, but is pretty simple to use and ensures your hosted sites have proper bandwidth available, site backups, power redundancy and other features a proper web host should have.
#5 by David on February 5th, 2010
For a total virgin, Dreamweaver would be going into a one-way dead end street. Once able to do something in DW, you will end-up against a wall, not able to go any further. Since you would have spent so much time learning DW, you would not have ANY experience in coding.
Dead.
Sell your copy of DW.
With the money you get:
Buy Photoshop.
Download Notepad++ (free): this will be your editor, and nothing else).
Buy a domain name and rent a LAMP server (with Php and mysql, and NO windows) Should cost you less than 70$/year.
Armed with Photoshop, learn how to make nice images.
Armed with your new site, visit w3schools.com and start learning HTML. (1 week for the basics)
Make a few static pages.
Continue by learning javascript (add a few gadgets to your site, in javascript). (1 week for a few bits)
Continue learning php (a few weeks for the basics)
Continue learning mysql. (a week for the basics),
Grab "free scripts" from the web, but NOT too complicated, and learn "by example". A good source of simple scripts at http://www.web2coders.com (free).
Within two months, you will be well on your way to become proficient!
Good luck!
(And you can always come back here and ask me questions: I help coders who make an effort, but not Dreamweaver users…)
#6 by Jack L on February 5th, 2010
If you intend to create a few websites (usually you will end up more than 1 website), go for multiple web hosting where you could handle your websites in one account.
I suggest following webhosting , they are quite good.
Hostmonster http://www.anurl.com/?PQMRY
They offer hosting of "unlimited domains" and you will get massive webspace of 200000 MB (200 GB ). They only charge $5.95/month and they offer "a free Domain Name" and installing service called "Fantastico". By using Fantastico, you could create own forum, photo gallery, shopping cart (e-commerce),your own auction site and your own blogs within few seconds. They also offer "Free Website Builder" as well.
Visit the site to check details.
Hostmonster http://www.anurl.com/?PQMRY
Domains
Following site is quite good to register domains as price is reasonable with free privacy. Some charge about $5/ year just for free privacy.
IPOWER http://www.anurl.com/?TXIBE
#7 by glad.romance on February 6th, 2010
My wife and I are building a website for our business through a program that is available online. This program shows you what is being searched by the masses and tells you what keywords you should use to gain ranking in the search engines. This program allows you to plug in any type of website that you wish to design and will help you step by step on how to build it right so you can get rankings above your competitors. I would be happy to give you more information about this program if you would like to email me at robertbreitling@yahoo.com or if you would like to read more about it you can in my Yahoo Answers Profile page. I hope that this helps.
BEST WISHES!
#8 by rails on February 6th, 2010
theres no such thing as Unlimited bandwidth
#9 by truth on February 6th, 2010
Unlimited bandwidth and hosting doesnt exist!
#10 by urbantool on February 6th, 2010
I guess speed isn’t important anymore?
#11 by Sam on February 6th, 2010
It is always a bad idea to start a business you know nothing about. You better do some research first.
Here are a couple of books from Amazon.com that you should read to start getting up to speed:
http://www.amazon.com/Web-Hosting-Manager-Christoph-Puetz/dp/1411653149/ref=sr_1_9?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1194943200&sr=1-9
http://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Linux-Web-Hosting-Denoncourt/dp/1583470328/ref=sr_1_10?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1194943200&sr=1-10
http://www.amazon.com/How-Host-your-own-Server/dp/1847281087/ref=pd_bbs_2_s9_rk?ie=UTF8&s=books&s9r=8afd079f0d3b3162010d40d725800065&itemPosition=2&qid=1194943200&sr=1-2
#12 by psychic on February 6th, 2010
Wrong Unmetered But NOT unlimited
Example u have unmeter bdwidth on dedi server with 100Mbit port MAX transfer u get
100Mbit = 12.5MB
which is 1.029968TB day max a month thats a max of almost 31TB Which is a lot, but NOT unlimited.
Also bare in mind ALL datacentres have caps on unmetered servers so if you are using say
5TB transfer they will ship you to a high rate or ask to pay x / hundred GB
Note im a host i know what i do and so do the larger companies which i
work with
#13 by faisal313pk on February 7th, 2010
Free web hosting usually not reliable and it may DOWN,,DOWN,,DOWN,,So your vistor will not come back .All your hard work may be lost and Search Engines are NOT on friendly terms with free webhosting site.Free web hosting are also have a lot of annoying advertisement…
I use HostMonster..HostMonster offers the absolute best value for web hosting available today. They have the best combination of features, reliability, speed, and price, as well as the ability to consistently maintain the best customer service in the industry. They also allow you to host UNLIMITED domains and UNLIMITED subdomains with 1 account! They offer UNLIMITED email accounts, extremely generous storage(200G!!!) and bandwidth(2000G!!!) allowance, eCommerce capibility, free setup, free domain for life, tons of free scripts and bonuses, they accept Paypal, and offer a 30-day money back guarantee. They also support PHP, MySQL, Perl, Ruby, SSL and more!
HostMonster offers tons of additional useful web applications such as 100 free MySQL databases, spam protection, web templates, Agora Shopping Cart, OS Commerce, Fantastico script library, Form mail, Guestbook, Bulletin Board, PHP Nuke, Chat, Blogger, Promotion Tools, Image Galleries, Poll/Surveys, Web Auctions, and search engine submitter amongst others.
HostMonster:http://www.hostmonster.com/track/hostingindex/text1
Whether you are looking to host a personal hobby site or multiple, high-traffic, large eCommerce based storefront sites, HostMonster is currently the best value available.HostMonster also guarantees 99.9% network and server uptime.
The price is only $5.95/month!!!
HostMonster:http://www.hostmonster.com/track/hostingindex/text1
Good luck!