7 Practical Suggestions for Finding a Good Web hosting plan
Finding a solid web hosting plan is really a tough work. It is hard to find valid and unbiased information on the internet. There are so many different terms, options, reviews, choices … etc, and most people just try their luck. Here I’m offering “7 Practical Suggestions for Finding a Good Web Hosting Plan”. These suggestions are based on my many years experience and observation. Hope this is useful for people who are struggling to choose the right hosting plan. Any feedback welcome.
-
7 Practical Suggestions for Finding a Good Web Hosting Plan
smallwei

(2 votes)
smallwei 3:38 pm on October 20, 2009
1. Be very careful about those so called web hosting review, award, ranking, recommendation … etc.
Most of them earn money through affiliation. When you click on their links and sign up with the hosting, they’ll make money. If this is the case, imagine which one they would recommend? (Did I hear ca-ching?)
2. If you want a more serious hosting, stay away from those claims to provide unlimited storage, unlimited bandwidth.
There is no free lunch, and if you need some stability with your website, avoid these unlimited plans.
Obviously, if you don’t mind all these things, unlimited plans provide great value.
3. There are mainly 4 kinds of hosting plans out there:
Here is the list of some legitimate and well know Web Hosting companies in each category:
(The ones with * I have personally used before)
Shared Hosting:
- *BlueHost (http://www.bluehost.com)
- *1and1 (http://www.1and1.com)
- Dreamhost (http://www.dreamhost.com)
VPS:
- *Spry (http://www.spry.com)
Dedicated:
Rockspace (http://www.Rackspace.com)
The Planet (http://www.theplanet.com)
Cloud:
Mosso (http://www.rackspacecloud.com)
*Media Temple (http://www.mediatemple.net)
Amazon EC2 (http://aws.amazon.com/ec2/)
GoGrid (http://www.gogrid.com/)
4. Which one to go? Windows or Linux?
When you choose a hosting plan, you need to decide which operation system (OS) you want your applications to run on.
Linux is widely popular, where most people are more familiar with Windows interface. In general, Linux tend to be slight cheaper than Windows hosting plan, probably due to licensing cost. If you decided to go with Linux, sometimes you also get to choose which Linux OS you want to install. (CentOS, RedHat Enterprise, Ubantu … etc)
5. Site performance and stability.
To me, I think performance and stability are the most important things to consider when I pick a hosting. Regardless how much storage space or how much bandwidth a company offers, if the site cannot stay up and running these is all meaningless.
When you want to evaluate a hosting company, Google is your best friend. Don’t just read good reviews, but pay attention to the bad ones too. Check out the company’s forum as well. See what’s the general sentiment of its users.
6. Take advantage of Money back guarantee.
A lot of hosting companies offer money back guarantee. Take advantage of that! After signing up, get a feel of the customer support response time, website performance, stability, and how knowledgeable their staffs are. If you smell something is fishy, try someone else. It will be a lot of hassle to move your production website after it goes live.
7. Some other tips and suggestions.