Choosing a web host based on price? Don't!
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by David Leonhardt
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It's tempting. There are so many companies offering cut-rate hosting - loaded with astounding post-futuristic techno-gizmo features ! - that it just makes sense to save a few dollars, right?
Think again. First,
consider how much you would be saving. If you run a business site, saving
$5, $10 or even $15 a month is not a big saving. No going concern will become
a stopping concern on account of even $15 a month. But the wrong web host
can stop a business cold.
Here are three
reasons to look beyond price when choosing your web host.
1. Usability. Confession
time: I chose my first website host based on price. The control panel was
not easy to use, and I often found myself traveling in circles trying to
enter it. I switched to my second web host based not just on price, but on
usability, and I instantly became a pro. Well, not quite. But I was able
to manage my email accounts and learn about CGI, and check my traffic stats
and edit my html files right on the server. Not bad for a newbie who couldn't
even find his files on his previous host's server.
2. Service. I
thought my second host had great service. They even answered my emails. Until
the dreaded day that some guy with a chip on his shoulder filed a phony spam
complaint. I was out in the cold. In fact, they would not answer my emails
or even speak to me at all. Meanwhile, my ISP responded to the same phony
complaint immediately, sharing with me a copy and giving me a chance to deal
with it. That ISP is now my third web host. I pay a little more, but the
personal service is worth it. I have no hesitation recommending http://www.phastnet.com/
to anybody who wants the assurance that they won't be hung out to dry at
the first whiff of somebody in a bad mood.
3. Reliability. When
that phony spam complaint struck, my website was down for four days. Ouch!
But there are many other things that can bring down a site. What is your
web host's uptime? And how reliable is its reporting? Other things can happen,
like a form not functioning - meaning lost sales. Worse still, what
if Google comes crawling just when your site is down? Search engines don't
like sending people to unreliable sites. Companies like http://www.dotcom-monitor.com/
monitor websites for a variety of measures, and the cost is nothing compared
to the cost of lost sales.
Sure, save a few
bucks on hosting, and pay a whole lot more in lost sales and increased stress.
Your web host is your Internet landlord. Take as much time choosing your
web host as you would the place you live in. Price alone just is not enough. |