
So, you’re done with the free web hosts. Gone through Geocities, Angelfire,
Fortune City. You’re exhausted with the pop- ups and banners. You want a real
site. But where to go? You look around the net, and the possibilities seem
endless. 20 MB of space for only $20 a month! Wow! That’s fantastic!
Or is it? Way back when I bought my domain and signed up with a web host, I was
the typical “the internet is so wonderful” optimist. I was thrilled to find
something that sounded just about what I kind of wanted – and bam, just like
that, $300 poorer and with a useless chunk of web space that wouldn’t even
work properly. My domain addresses wouldn’t connect, my content was being
warped – things weren’t looking too good for me.|
A year later and much the wiser, I know better. My site is working, I have a
lovely, helpful support team, and I now know what I want. But, that’s all well
and good for me – I have had the added advantage of working for a web hosting
company. But what about the rest of you out there who don’t have my
experience, who see a world of opportunity and are about to jump into the
cesspit of money loss and disappointment.
So, I figure, why not let you in on a useful hint, one that may save you from
misfortune. What is it, you ask? Well, simply – know what you want! Sounds way
too simple for me to be handing it out, right? I don’t think so! Sure, you
have a vague idea of what you want, but do you know what all of it means? The
“mumbo jumbo”, so to speak?
I didn’t think so! Listen up, sit back, relax, and before you go jumping off
the deep end, scroll down and read a bit.
MB of space
MB? Eh? Well, MB stands for MegaByte. This is basically the amount of
storage space you will have. You can figure out how much space you will need if
you spend a little bit of time thinking about what is going onto your site –
how graphic intensive it will be, how many pages, any multimedia or music, etc.
Make an approximation in your head and then add another 50. This will allow you
to add on and expand. It’s always better to have too much, rather than too
little.
Pricing (Monthly/Yearly)
the payment plans are generally either monthly or yearly. Make sure, even if
you want a year or more of hosting, to start with a monthly plan! If you give
them $3/400 for a year, and then they end up being useless, I’ll bet you that
you won’t be getting that money back. If you start with a monthly account, you
can always upgrade to a yearly account. And if you can’t upgrade and you’re
really worried, add up how much it will be for a year, and set that money aside
to slowly add back onto your credit card every month.
Domain Registration
do you already own a domain name? A domain name is basically the
www.yourdomainname.com. Most of web hosts will provide domain name registration
in their packages. If you already own your own, you will have to transfer it to
their name servers. Make sure this is possible! Ask them if they will do it for
you, or ask for directions on how to do it yourself. If you don’t own a name
already, though, how many will you need? Will the one be enough? Do you need
redirects; do you want extra names attached to sub-domains?
And then you need the actual name! If you’re completely stumped, have no
ideas, there are some really good places online which will create a list for
you.
http://www.1ststar.com/cgi-bin/fswiz/wizard.pl?show_wizard=1 &
http://www.ecxmall.com/domains/
Make sure your name is relevant to what’s on your site – people tend to get
annoyed if your website is called “cool- cars.com” and it ends up being
about cushion embroidery.
Email Accounts
there are quite a variety of options in this area. You have mail servers,
mailing lists, redirects, catch all. If you’re going to be getting a
substantial amount of mail through your website, you might want a mail server
– an actual site online where you have your own personal mail box. It would
usually be mail.yoursitename.com. Mailing lists are sometimes offered and
sometimes not – if you’re going to be sending out a newsletter, promotional
info, etc to a lot of people you might want to go with this option. A mail catch
all basically does what its name suggests – catches emails with typos, wrong
names etc, but have your domain written properly in the address, (i.e. typo@yourdomain.com).
And finally, mail redirects, which give you an email address, but redirects
emails sent to it to another mailbox – for example, if you have johnny@johnnyssite.com,
it could redirect to your hotmail account.
There are many other added options as well, which you need to think about. If
you want to have multimedia on your page(s), Front Page support, Access/database
support, cgi-bin, custom 404 error pages, search engine submission. Sit down and
make a list of what you need.
But before you do anything, send the support team of the web host an email. Ask
them if they provide all of your specific requirements; describe what you are
looking for. Be friendly and concise, and see how they react. If they are prompt
and friendly or slow and unpleasant. You are always going to end up needing some
sort of support during your hosting, and this will be a good indication of what
kind of assistance you will get further down the line.
Basically what I’m telling you here is to think before you spend. So many
people have tales of woe and disappointment; don’t end up being one of them.
There are no guarantees here, but make it as close to it as possible.
Author:M6.Net
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