You don't want to end up having to pay for extra features that you realise afterwards you needed.
You don't want your website showing an error page on the Internet due to excessive downtime by your hosting providers servers.
When choosing your web host you also need to consider what your requirements are, and will be in the future. You will need to carefully consider:
How many websites will you need? Or how many are you going to need?
How much disk space and bandwidth do you need?
What extras will you need eg email with auto-responders included?
How much do you want to spend on web hosting?
You should try and compare at least 5 Website hosting providers to see what they are offering. Here is a list of some qualities you should look for:
A reasonable price for your needs: Look for an affordable monthly fee with what you consider high value.
Disk space and Bandwidth allowance: Is your site or sites going to have audio, video or much downloadable material?
How Many Domains: Look for unlimited domains included.
Sub Domains: Again, look for unlimited.
Does it have an in-built Website Builder? Comes in very handy if you don't know much about building websites or HTML.
24/7 email and phone support: This is important. Not everyone has this.
At least a 99.5% uptime 99.9% is best. What good is a host to you if they are constantly offline?
Free set-up, no hidden charges.
Unlimited email accounts allowed. Unlimited is great but at least 20 should suffice.
FTP accounts.
Auto-responders included, you don't want to pay extra to add on an auto-responder later. This happens a lot. Look for it as part of the package.
Compare all other the special features even though you think you don't need them or you don't know what they are. Features like:
CGI.
FrontPage.
Streaming Audio and Video.
Hotlink protection.
Web stats.
When choosing a web host it is important that you take your time to compare hosting plans before you make your decision. There are some so-called web hosts out there that are absolutely useless at web hosting, remember that anyone can become a web host. Your best bet is to go with a company that has been around a few years. You could do a search for online reviews on the company you are considering.
If you are considering a new web host I would recommend you include the below link hostgator.bloggers-guide in your list of 5 web hosts to compare. Visit the link below. Go to WEBHOSTING Take a look at the plans and when you make the comparison you'll find that they will come out on top.
Web Host And Design
Finding the perfect web host can be difficult. Many people spend months looking for a host that is perfect for them, only to be disappointed very frequently. I will give a list of criteria you must consider when picking a host. Rule #1 is, "If it looks too good to be true, then it most likely is". Keep that in mind and heed what I have to say and you will soon have a happy home on the web.
In this article, I will concentrate on finding the perfect shared hosting account. This is where several websites are hosted on a single server. Using a shared hosting account is ideal for smaller sites using dynamic pages or just about any reasonable size site with static html pages. When comparing hosts, there are three things you need to compare - I suggest making a spreadsheet if you plan to compare lots of hosts. The first is the amount of disk space you get. The second is bandwidth and the third is probably the most important - the cost.
Before I go on, I need to mention that all web hosts will oversell their resources - this means selling more than you have and hoping that most people will not need everything you promised them. Most hosts can pull this off. Others are just greedy, or simply don't understand how to manage this properly. Usually when you see complaints about slow servers or servers crashing frequently, this is why. If you keep rule #1 in mind, you will avoid most disreputable hosts. 1000GB bandwidth for $5 is not a bargain - it is too good to be true.
The first thing you need to do, before you even start to hunt for hosts is decide on what you need to host your site. Will you have one site or more than one? How much disk space do you need, how much bandwidth do you think you need? Do you need several MySQL databases?
If you only see the need to host one site, a normal shared hosting account is perfect for you, but if you feel you need to host more than one site, you need to look at something called a "Reseller Account". It's also a shared hosting account, but it allows you to (usually) create as many sites as you like, as long as they use less that the total maximum resources allowed.
Deciding on disk space is easy if your site is already created. Chances are, if this is your first site, you will most likely need less than 10MB initially (most hosts will give you at least 100MB). Bandwidth will be more difficult, because unless your site was hosted somewhere else, and you already know how much bandwidth you use in a month/day, this is very hard to estimate. The sad truth for most new webmasters is that most sites won't need a lot of bandwidth the first couple of months.
All shared (and reseller) hosting accounts will include some sort of control panel - this is a web page that allows you to configure the e-mail accounts that comes with the account, allows you to manage your databases and much more. The two main ones are CPanel and Plesk. If you don't know the difference, you don't have to worry about it - both have the same features, and the only difference is the look and feel. Plesk has a very rich, Windows-like interface, while the default CPanel interface is much simpler and faster to load. CPanel is the most popular, more flexible and usually preferred. You will generally also find that hosts using CPanel are also cheaper than hosts using Plesk, even though the quality of everything else might be identical.
Lastly, if you have a gut feeling about a host, listen to it. Hosts with badly designed web sites should be avoided - it most likely means they are a small or newly formed company. They might be excellent, but chances are just as likely that the owner might decide that he is not making enough money and quit, abandoning all he's customers.
Both David O Connell & Juan Van Heerden are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
David O Connell has sinced written about articles on various topics from Site Promotion, E Diet and Blogging. David O Connell: Looking for the How to Start and Maintain. David O Connell's top article generates over 135000 views. to your Favourites.
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