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Choosing
a Hosting Service: A Checklist for Business Owners
For a website to appear on the Internet,
you require a “server” that is usually provided by a
web hosting company. Hosting companies are paid monthly,
quarterly or yearly. Some companies come with guarantees,
too. Recommendations from other business owners and
web designers are excellent ways to find a good hosting
service.
One of the primary features I recommend
is that the hosting companies can grow with you. If
they only offer one package, and you need more, your
web site maybe down for up to 2 days and/or you may
have to change the code on any forms you use to match
the new “server settings”.
Don’t be afraid to read a hosting service’s
subscriber information, FAQs (frequently asked questions),
note areas or bulletin boards on their sites.
A good hosting company offers as many
of these basics as possible:
This is a hosting company I can easily
afford.
They offer a Money Back Guarantee.
They have information on their site
about server uptime/downtime.
The company contacts me, at my primary
email address, when/if there are any server problems.
(Could be problems when they’re updating their server,
hurricanes, etc.)
They offer your own IP address http://postmaster.aol.com/info/ipexpl.html
They provide at least 5 POP email accounts
(example yourname@yoursitesname.com) Your email accounts
should include Alias Accounts, which look like a POP
account to the person sending you an email; however,
the address is actually an “alias” that's forwarded
to any other email account you choose. And when you
send an email back to the original sender, it is the
forwarding email account, NOT the yourname@yoursitename.com
that the sender receives.
There is a Web-based Email system (a
place for you to read your email online). If not, my
favorite is www.e-mol.com
An easy system for email forwarding
(and vacation notice) capability.
24-hour customer service, by phone,
even if it’s a long distance call, is best!
50 mg space (the space you need for
a 100 page website with each page being approx. 8x11)
2 Gig Data Transfer/month (this will
be enough for quite a while!)
Front Page Extensions – only necessary
if you create a web site with MS Front Page
Cgi/PHP/MySQL (or asp availability).
Check with your designer to see what you’ll require
for forms to be created).
Easy Control Panel: This feature is
especially important if you want to maintain your site
or have someone else easily maintain it. It's the one
place to visit when making changes to your site, add
addresses, etc
Statistics - Does your hosting companies
plan include monthly and yearly statistics on each of
your web pages? Will you know how someone found each
of your web pages?
Secure server, Shopping cart (and other
things you’ll need to set up a merchant account system)
Server type: The type of server a hosting
company you choose, should take into consideration the
programs you will run for things like your shopping
cart, affiliate program, web site pages, etc. If you're
using ASP, JSP, PHP, CGI, PL, or CSS, these programs
will influence the choice of a server and vice-versa.
Your hosting service may use Windows (which for example
accepts ASP but not PHP), Linux or Unix-based (Apache/FreeBSD/etc.)
servers.
Password Protection – If you have plans
to create a membership are or client’s only area of
your site, this is something to consider.
Newsletter or announcement list
Auto-responders
(not usually available on very low cost hosting packages)
Special thanks to wise-women.org and HTML-on-the-WEB@yahoogroups.com
for some assistance with this list.
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