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How to Change Your Website’s Cloud Hosting Provider Without the Fuss

<p>Fed up of your website’s existing host&comma; but afraid to move all those delicate files&comma; domain names and namespaces across&quest; Don&&num;8217&semi;t be&period; Follow this easy guide to transferring your data to a better cloud hosting provider&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Sign up with a new cloud hosting provider&period;<&sol;strong> You’ll need to pick up a new hosting plan that can support the amount of data you have&period; If you can’t find any reference to the amount of data your website comprises&comma; e-mail your current provider and ask them to send you a list of files on the filesystem&comma; or a link that will allow you to view them&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Copy all your website’s files to your computer&period;<&sol;strong> You’ll need to move your entire website – including images&comma; sitemaps and any other assets – to a <em>local host<&sol;em> before you can transfer them anywhere else&period; To do this&comma; you’ll need to copy all the files that make up the website to your <em>local <&sol;em>hard drive&period; You will require an &OpenCurlyQuote;FTP’ &lpar;File Transfer Protocol&rpar; client for this step – here’s a free one&period; Some providers offer a built-in FTP client as part of their website management portal that you can access through your browser without having to download a program&period; Search your current provider’s site for &OpenCurlyQuote;FTP’ for more information&period; If you’re using Dreamweaver&comma; use the &OpenCurlyQuote;GET’ command to suck all the pages from the remote to your local host&period; If for some reason you are still using FrontPage&comma; you can get similar functionality through &OpenCurlyQuote;import’&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Let your domain provider know that you’ve moved&period;<&sol;strong> You might have bought your domain through your current cloud hosting provider&comma; or from a third party&period; Neither is problematic – you can host your data on one plan&comma; and rent the domain name on another &lpar;a little like renting your house from an estate agent or realtor&comma; and renting your furniture from somewhere else&colon; perfectly possible and quite commonplace&rpar;&period; To let your domain provider know that you’ve moved on&comma; first of all&comma; find the new address you’re going to move your data to &lpar;this is referred to as a &OpenCurlyQuote;namespace’&rpar;&period; Your <em>new<&sol;em> hosting provider will have these details in their &OpenCurlyQuote;help’ section&semi; or at the least&comma; they’ll have a guide that explains how to access the address&period; Record the address and then enter it into the &OpenCurlyQuote;DNS’ &lpar;Domain Name Server&rpar; settings of your new domain provider&period; The DNS effectively represents the Yellow Pages of websites&colon; when a user tries to access your website they actually contact the DNS&comma; which points them in the right direction&period; It’s critical&comma; therefore&comma; to get your DNS settings spot-on&period; You have this up and running in no time with a little help from your new cloud hosting provider’s &OpenCurlyQuote;help’ section &&num;8212&semi; or&comma; if they have it&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;live chat’&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Upload your files again&period;<&sol;strong> Remember how we downloaded our files using an FTP client &lpar;either downloaded or built-in&rpar;&quest; We’re going to do that again&period; This time&comma; we’re going to point the FTP path to the new provider &lpar;or use <em>their<&sol;em> built-in FTP client&rpar;&period; Transferring all your files directly&comma; just as you downloaded them&comma; should mean your site works exactly as it did before – of course&comma; this time without any issues you had with your previous provider&excl;<br &sol;>&NewLine;There <em>are<&sol;em> always going to be a few things that could potentially go wrong during this process&comma; but these are the nuts and bolts&period; If you’re experiencing extreme difficulties&comma; your best friend is likely to be your new cloud hosting provider’s user forums&period; They’re operated by real humans with a genuine interest in seeing your site move across without a hitch&period; If you have more tips&comma; please feel free to drop a comment in the section below&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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