Web Hosting For Internet Professionals
As internet professionals it becomes a necessary
thing to know what to expect from web hosting providers. Internet service
providers are a dime a dozen and so are web hosting providers but, while you
can sit in a coffee shop and check your email through wireless internet if your
DSL goes down, many times your business can come to a screeching halt when your
web host has issues.
When you run an online business that generates
daily revenue a hosting outage or problem can make you go crazy. This is why it
is absolutely imperative that you do the research ahead of time to ensure that
you get the right hosting provider for your business. For those of you that are
too late on this, you can get it right the second or third time around. Do your
math and give your business stability and security.
Whatever you do, never go cheap if youÕre making
money or expect to be. This is the most common mistake people make as internet
business owners. Hosting really doesn't cost all that much anymore these days
but if you really want your website up time at maximum and a feature rich
hosting plan with quality support then don't be skittish about paying a decent
monthly price.
Most people pay four times more for dial-up then
they are willing to pay for a decent hosting plan. A small business should
really never be on one of these plans anyway as the cheap hosting plans
typically share one server with up to 1,100 other web sites. This is called
shared hosting and works just fine provided that youÕre one thousand other
server neighbors don't crash things with resource hungry scripts or host
illegal content that gets you in trouble with the search engines. The latter is
possible because search engines do a kind of guilt by association for websites
sharing a server or an IP address.
These shared web hosting plans usually do use
the term "small business hosting" and other terms that target the
business. A dedicated server can
usually be had for around $100 for an economy box. When you compare this to the
overhead of a physical storefront is this really too much to pay for your
business?
Another thing for business sites to consider is
something like "the slashdot effect" killing your server. This is a
term that is usually applied to instances where a piece of content on a site is
listed on a major portal that is usually community based. The website then gets
hammered with ongoing traffic from the portal. Many times this is almost enough
to bring a dedicated server to its knees. A shared hosting plan and even a
virtual dedicated hosting plan could not survive in most cases.
If you're going to put your business online then
do the research. If you need to go cheap then skip five espressos a month and
at least pout your business on a server that will give you the performance you
need.