Web Hosting, Things To Consider Small Business


by John Reed - Date: 2007-08-28 - Word Count: 721 Share This!

So, you want to put your website online. Before you commit to a web hosting service first consider the needs of your website for both the short and long term.

Web hosting is the term used to describe an owner of a server leasing out space on his/her server to individuals and businesses for the placing of their websites online. This is indeed the cheapest route to getting ones website online.

One of the largest mistakes of beginner type website owners is that they only look at their web hosting needs based on what their website currently needs. This is purely poor planning and can backfire. While time is shortened from conception to online launch, the time lost and the frustration experienced in having to move an entire website from one hosting service to another can cause extremely high stress. Especially, if the site starts doing well as far as traffic is concerned.

Down time can kill an otherwise powerfully growing website. If the website is down, the users are left out in the cold and could potentially stray. This gives your competitor time to steal your customers right you from under you. Also, it gives non competitors the opportunity to grab your visitors attention. They only have so much time to allot to web surfing. Trust me, you want that surfing to be done on your website not someone elses.

There are many questions to be considered when choosing a web hosting service among those are some very simple ones such as;

1. Does the hosting service that you intend to use have the space to expand your website should it become necessary?

2. What is next web hosting package up from yours? Does it provide a significant benefit from your current hosting package being considered

3. How many web surfers do you anticipate would visit your website per month?

4. What is the reputation of the web hosting service that you are considering? Run searches online. If they have a problem people will blog about it.

5. Do you envision needed a database for any reason in the future? Does your considered web hosting package provide an adequate sized database allotment?

6. Does the web hosting service provide adequate bandwidth to allow for the number of visitors that you expect in the foreseeable future?

7. Does the web hosting service have adequate and prompt customer service? Search the name of the company in a popular search engine with the term customer service. Look for any complaints from other users.

8. Will your website employ multimedia? These files are usually pretty large and eat up lots of storage space and bandwidth as it is downloaded. If so, you will need to factor that into the amount of web space and bandwidth you purchase.

9. Which methods will you use to promote your new website? TypoBounty dot com should be your first step in this direction. It is low cost, high yield and cleans your site of errors.

10. Will you accept payments on your website? Paypal or 2checkout can help with this.

There are certainly other questions that can be asked, but these are some that should be considered before locking yourself into a contract.

Other problems like double billing and incorrect charges are also a concern. So it is best to use a service like paypal or other third party system to immunize your funds from over payment through incorrect billing.

TypoBounty dot com allows individuals and businesses to offer bounties or small cash rewards for any errors that can be found on their website. Searchers come to the website looking for errors, reading the entire website. This greatly increases the potential that they will buy your product. Your web property gains visitors that are very attentive to your offer, and will read more of your offer. After all of your websites errors are found and eliminated, it still receives massive amounts of attentive traffic looking for more.

The point of creating a website is to achieve some level of success. That intended level of success and all that it requires must be factored into the initial build and launch of the web property.

The author, John Reed, has 15 years online business and marketing experience and has had the opportunity to use and review multiple advertising strategies. You can read more about avoiding the money trap of marketing at www.cheap-online-advertising.com

Related Tags: web hosting, web hosting provider, affordable web hosting, business web hosting

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