You don't need to be computer wizard to own a
website. You don't have to know much about XHTML, servers, or SQL
injection attacks. "Great!" you say. However, as with anything that
costs your business money, you should make sure you understand what
your actual needs are, prior to writing the check.
Free Hosting!
Wouldn't
that be great? There actually are companies you can find on the Web
that will "give" away hosting and let you get your website up and
running without having to pay a penny. The problem is that it's not
really free. In exchange for not charging you for the hosting, your
website will be required to display advertising which the hosting
company then sells (of which you don't get a penny.) Many "free"
hosting companies also require that your site's address (domain name)
be an extension of their own. For example,
www.example.com/sites/yourcompanyname/ instead of
www.yourcompanyname.com. This dilutes your own company's image and
branding.
Even if you're okay with not having your own domain
name, and sharing advertising space on your site, you may want to
consider the full effect this could have on the image of your business.
The next time you visit your favorite restaurant, imagine what it'd be
like if, to save on costs, they'd sold advertising space on their
signs, menus, table-tops, napkins, and windows. Then imagine if their
competitors had purchased some of that ad space. Not a great
impression. And like a restaurant, your website is an experience (good
or bad) for each visitor.
The same arguments can be made for
email addresses. While using the free email services available through
AOL, Yahoo, Gmail and others can be great for individuals, why waste
the marketing opportunity for your business? Every time you send an
email out from your Yahoo email account, you're advertising for Yahoo,
and reinforcing Yahoo's brand instead of yours. Why not let your
business benefit instead? Make sure all your email comes from
you@yourcompanyname.com. (Well, not literally. Use your own company's
domain name.)
How About UNLIMITED Bandwidth And Disk Space?
Nope.
It's a popular trend in the very competitive hosting business to set up
hosting plans that offer unlimited (usually shown in capital letters to
make sure you see it) disk space and monthly bandwidth. (Bandwidth is
the measurement of the amount of traffic your website can use each
month.)
While it sounds like a good deal, it is an impossible
promise for the hosting company to keep. No hosting company in the
world has an unlimited number of servers, or an unlimited capacity to
handle unlimited bandwidth. What they are counting on is that most
people don't use their full monthly allotment of bandwidth, or all
their available disk space that comes with their hosting plans. That
means the companies can "oversell" the number of people on their
servers, by pretending there's more space and bandwidth than are
technically available. However, if you tried to take them up on the
offer of "unlimited" you'd quickly find out (and it's usually in the
fine print of their service contracts) that there are phrases like
"reasonable use" that will suddenly apply to you and cause limits to
suddenly exist. Technically this amounts to false advertising, but no
one seems to be calling the hosting companies on it yet.
Don't be fooled. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is, and you do typically get what you pay for.
How Much You Should Spend On Hosting
Does
your business need to have website access and functioning email 24
hours a day, 7 days a week? Is it critical to your business that large
numbers of people can visit your site at one time, without crashing the
server? If you're a small business but answered "yes" to these
questions, you may be disappointed to know that the most commonly used
hosting solutions are probably not for you.
Dedicated Hosting
If
your website is "mission critical" you should probably invest in what's
called a "dedicated" server. This means that your website gets it's
very own server, and doesn't have to share resources (memory,
performance, etc.) with other websites. Dedicated servers are not
cheap, and start around a couple of hundred dollars a month. The
differences in cost are most often the quality of the hardware, and the
amount of monitoring and service that come with the package. These
types of hosting plans will often include setup fees and software
licensing fees.
Virtual Private Servers (VPS)
A slightly
cheaper version of these types of plans are "virtual private servers"
(or VPS). These are created by taking a dedicated server and setting up
several virtual servers running side by side—each with it's own website
and operating system supporting it. While you share the physical
server, each site still gets its own resources. The cost is less
because you're sharing some of the expense, but you still have
individual control over the complete environment your website lives in.
Shared Hosting
Most
of the hosting you see advertising for is called "shared" hosting. It's
cheap, because essentially you share the server (both physically and
all the software resources) with any number of other website owners.
While the cost is nice, it's less reliable than a dedicated server,
because you never know if one of the other site owners you're sharing
the server with is sending out tons of spam, setting up phishing
websites, or otherwise misbehaving. Since your website shares the same
server IP address as these unknown potential hooligans, you share in
that IP's reputation around the Web.
People who abuse hosting
can also cause the server to freeze by running memory intensive scripts
and programming, and if the server crashes, your site does too. Even
someone doing nothing illegal can bring a server down, just by creating
a site that becomes wildly popular. If your website shares their
server, the more their website uses of the server's memory and
performance, the less there is available for yours.
Which Type Of Hosting Is Right For You
So
how much to spend? It depends on what you need. Most small business
websites will do just fine on a shared hosting plan. How much disk
space and bandwidth you need will depend on what your website does, and
may change over time. But if your business relies completely on your
website, or you find yourself featured in national media (so now
everyone in the country wants to visit your site) or are a fast growing
company, you may want to go in for a dedicated server.
Make sure
your hosting is part of the conversation you have with your website
designer or development professional, and don't be afraid to ask
questions.