projectw3
08-26-2006, 03:27 AM
Hi folks, I hope this guide helps everyone out there who is choosing a reseller account.
First, check the support of the hosting companies. During peace time, when there are no server outages, how quick are the companies in responding? Beware of companies who claim 24/7 support but they're chat is always offline. Also, giving a phone number that leads to a voicemail doesn't sound good as well. Observe a company during outages. How did the company respond? Did they lash out at customers? Understand that if there are outages, support emails can flood a hosting company. In those times, be patient. Give a company time. Did the company have a good understanding of the outage? Did they learn from the previous experience? A crisis will bring out the best, or the worst in a team.
Here are a couple of situations that a hosting provider can score points. All customers will appreciate their hosting provider to suspend or terminate anyone who utilizes resources unfairly and jeopardize the whole operations. Such use include email spamming and proxy sites, sometimes extending to including huge forums, which can slow down a server drastically. In the case that a customer knowingly put an unfair load on the server, the account should be suspended, so as not to risk the other sites going down as well. Appreciate the hosting company if they bother to send out at least some form of notice. If the sites are growing, it may have outgrown the reseller account and require an alternative solution. In this situation, a good webhost should warn you before hand instead of shutting you down without warning or notice. Why is there a difference between the warning and no warning?
Always remember this as a rule of thumb. If systems go down, that can be tolerated to a certain extent. Anyway, no company wants to the server to be down and create more problems for themselves. There isn't any intention to screw customers up in the first place. That is key to having a successful partnership and relationship with your host. A warning says 2 things. (1) they are doing their job and monitoring server usage. (2) They have your interests at heart and provide ample warning and plenty of options. Also, by providing a warning, it indicates their willingness to get things right. On the other hand, an unfair suspension without warning says just 1 thing: "You are a small paying customer. You are not worth the money we are receiving from you. We don't want you. Get lost." Stay far away from any company who does that. That's a human intent on screwing up their customers.
When reading reviews, be discerning. Now you know what to look out for. If you read any reviews on hosts shutting down accounts without warning, be sure to counter check with the situations above. That alone will lead you in the right direction.
I was wrongfully accused of search engine spamming, creating link farms etc, just as the account that I had was growing (in terms of the number of sites with TLDomains and subdomains). I have been doing search engine marketing for 5 years and in the process, have gotten many of my sites to rank well in the search engines. If there's anything wrong with my linking methods, who's the first one to get hurt? The hosting company? The neighbouring sites? Wrong! I'll be the first one to get burnt. Why? Because if they are link farms, they'll hurt my sites, and they won't rank, and I won't make any money. And that takes away all reason for having the hosting account in the first place.
Here's my mistake. Many hosting companies oversell. I should have smelt a rat when I see a provider advertising this:
$10 reseller account. 5GB diskspace, 250gb bandwidth, unlimited domains, unlimited subdomains, ftp, databases, etc
When the industry standards are more like this:
$10 reseller account. 1GB diskspace, 50GB bandwidth, unlimited domains, unlimited subdomains, ftp, databases, etc
The truth is this. The provider was taking a gamble, hoping to seduce small paying customers, and hoping that they don't put up so many sites. When I started building many sites, they lost the gamble. To recoup their losses, they suspended the account without warning. The whole experience was frustrating, but I learnt an important lesson. A good hosting company should also know how to make strategic business decisions and this includes pricing their plans well and setting themselves up for success instead of taking a gamble that they can't win in the long run.
In all fairness, I'm one of those who may have special hosting needs in the near future. Growing from a single reseller account to 2, then 3, then 4 and 5 means that there's growth. In the not too distant future, the chances of me needing a VPS or dedicated server is going to be much higher than a company paying $5 with a couple of websites sitting on the server. And when I want to have an upgrade, who do you think I would go to? Of course I'll go to the host who'll do the best job whether it's a $5 account or a $10 account. Bottomline, provider with the best uptime, fastest and most knowledgeable support wins.
The fact that a hosting provider couldn't see this, says alot about their business acumen. And that's why they have to take bets. The business is getting really competitive. They can't get enough clients to stay profitable, so they have to resort to gambles.
Well, I certainly hope there are lessons in this guide that can be learnt. I learnt the hard way, and have no wish for anyone to share that same experience. It's a painful experience, and nobody deserves to have to go through that. I wish you good luck with your sites, and may the relationship between you and your web hosting provide blossom into a fruitful one.
First, check the support of the hosting companies. During peace time, when there are no server outages, how quick are the companies in responding? Beware of companies who claim 24/7 support but they're chat is always offline. Also, giving a phone number that leads to a voicemail doesn't sound good as well. Observe a company during outages. How did the company respond? Did they lash out at customers? Understand that if there are outages, support emails can flood a hosting company. In those times, be patient. Give a company time. Did the company have a good understanding of the outage? Did they learn from the previous experience? A crisis will bring out the best, or the worst in a team.
Here are a couple of situations that a hosting provider can score points. All customers will appreciate their hosting provider to suspend or terminate anyone who utilizes resources unfairly and jeopardize the whole operations. Such use include email spamming and proxy sites, sometimes extending to including huge forums, which can slow down a server drastically. In the case that a customer knowingly put an unfair load on the server, the account should be suspended, so as not to risk the other sites going down as well. Appreciate the hosting company if they bother to send out at least some form of notice. If the sites are growing, it may have outgrown the reseller account and require an alternative solution. In this situation, a good webhost should warn you before hand instead of shutting you down without warning or notice. Why is there a difference between the warning and no warning?
Always remember this as a rule of thumb. If systems go down, that can be tolerated to a certain extent. Anyway, no company wants to the server to be down and create more problems for themselves. There isn't any intention to screw customers up in the first place. That is key to having a successful partnership and relationship with your host. A warning says 2 things. (1) they are doing their job and monitoring server usage. (2) They have your interests at heart and provide ample warning and plenty of options. Also, by providing a warning, it indicates their willingness to get things right. On the other hand, an unfair suspension without warning says just 1 thing: "You are a small paying customer. You are not worth the money we are receiving from you. We don't want you. Get lost." Stay far away from any company who does that. That's a human intent on screwing up their customers.
When reading reviews, be discerning. Now you know what to look out for. If you read any reviews on hosts shutting down accounts without warning, be sure to counter check with the situations above. That alone will lead you in the right direction.
I was wrongfully accused of search engine spamming, creating link farms etc, just as the account that I had was growing (in terms of the number of sites with TLDomains and subdomains). I have been doing search engine marketing for 5 years and in the process, have gotten many of my sites to rank well in the search engines. If there's anything wrong with my linking methods, who's the first one to get hurt? The hosting company? The neighbouring sites? Wrong! I'll be the first one to get burnt. Why? Because if they are link farms, they'll hurt my sites, and they won't rank, and I won't make any money. And that takes away all reason for having the hosting account in the first place.
Here's my mistake. Many hosting companies oversell. I should have smelt a rat when I see a provider advertising this:
$10 reseller account. 5GB diskspace, 250gb bandwidth, unlimited domains, unlimited subdomains, ftp, databases, etc
When the industry standards are more like this:
$10 reseller account. 1GB diskspace, 50GB bandwidth, unlimited domains, unlimited subdomains, ftp, databases, etc
The truth is this. The provider was taking a gamble, hoping to seduce small paying customers, and hoping that they don't put up so many sites. When I started building many sites, they lost the gamble. To recoup their losses, they suspended the account without warning. The whole experience was frustrating, but I learnt an important lesson. A good hosting company should also know how to make strategic business decisions and this includes pricing their plans well and setting themselves up for success instead of taking a gamble that they can't win in the long run.
In all fairness, I'm one of those who may have special hosting needs in the near future. Growing from a single reseller account to 2, then 3, then 4 and 5 means that there's growth. In the not too distant future, the chances of me needing a VPS or dedicated server is going to be much higher than a company paying $5 with a couple of websites sitting on the server. And when I want to have an upgrade, who do you think I would go to? Of course I'll go to the host who'll do the best job whether it's a $5 account or a $10 account. Bottomline, provider with the best uptime, fastest and most knowledgeable support wins.
The fact that a hosting provider couldn't see this, says alot about their business acumen. And that's why they have to take bets. The business is getting really competitive. They can't get enough clients to stay profitable, so they have to resort to gambles.
Well, I certainly hope there are lessons in this guide that can be learnt. I learnt the hard way, and have no wish for anyone to share that same experience. It's a painful experience, and nobody deserves to have to go through that. I wish you good luck with your sites, and may the relationship between you and your web hosting provide blossom into a fruitful one.
