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Choosing a Web Hosting Provider

<p>Is there such a thing as the perfect web-hosting provider&quest; Maybe &&num;8211&semi; plenty of people stay with their company for years&comma; loyal&comma; happy customers&comma; content they’re getting good value for money&period; But equally there will be just as many people with horror stories to report&comma; of websites down for days on end&semi; of promised unlimited bandwidth surprisingly having limits after all&comma; or being forced to place banner ads on their site that clash badly with the overall design&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;So what’s the best way to avoid getting your fingers burnt&quest; Careful consideration of your requirements is essential &&num;8211&semi; below are some of the main points to keep in mind&period; Once you know what you need&comma; comparison sites such as WebHostingBlueBook&period;com are popular resources for webmasters&comma; and a useful place to start&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Costs &&num;8211&semi;<&sol;strong> You can either go for a free service&comma; which will often require you to post ads on your site&comma; or pay for it instead&period; Costs for a decent web hosting service could be anywhere from &dollar;10-&dollar;15&sol;month&period; It’s worth noting that a higher price isn’t necessarily a guarantee of a quality service&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>Technical Support&comma; Reliability and Speed &&num;8211&semi;<&sol;strong> I’ve lumped these together because in my opinion they’re about the most important factors to consider&period; A site that loads slowly&comma; or is frequently down&comma; is a big turn-off to users&period; And you need to know your hosting company will provide competent technical support 24&sol;7&sol;365&period; Imagine the &lpar;admittedly highly unlikely&rpar; scenario that a site such as Amazon were to crash days before Christmas and they couldn’t get through to their tech support because they were all on vacation&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;Web Space &&num;8211&semi;<&sol;strong> Is your provider offering you enough space&quest; It depends on the nature of your site really &&num;8211&semi; so long as your pages aren’t heavy with graphics or video clips&comma; then you can potentially keep over 100 pages going with even 5MB of space&period; But if you need to expand&comma; what is the gradient of increased cost&quest; Similarly&comma; does the host impose any limits on file size or type&quest;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong>SSL &&num;8211&semi;<&sol;strong> If you’re operating an E-commerce site then in all likelihood you’ll need a SSL to make sure transactions are secure&period; If your host doesn’t provide one&comma; or you’re not happy with the options available&comma; make a change&period; Plenty more advanced knowledge on this type of thing is available on this Small Business advice site&colon; http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;sba&period;gov&sol;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;Control Panel &&num;8211&semi; <&sol;strong>You want your web host to provide some form of control panel so you can do things such as changing your passwords or email addresses&comma; or conduct web analytics&comma; yourself&comma; rather than going through technical support which can be a tedious and frustrating process when regularly repeated&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;<strong><br &sol;>&NewLine;Bandwidth &&num;8211&semi;<&sol;strong> Do you have an idea of how much web traffic you can expect&quest; Does your host allow for growth&quest; Some providers offer unlimited bandwidth for a higher price&comma; but beware&comma; as in many cases it’s unlikely you’ll need it&period;<br &sol;>&NewLine;There are many other factors at play&comma; depending on how advanced your site needs to be&semi; what it’s purpose is&comma; and what your future plans are&comma; these are just a few of them&period; One thing I’ve always found useful in the past is recommendations and warnings from friends&comma; or even better&comma; other people and businesses with similar websites to my own&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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