Posts Tagged ‘wordpress’

Hosting Company Review Update

Hosting Company Review Update

Just thought I would follow up quickly after my 1st summary post on various hosting companies and types of hosting plans. Over the last week I have moved around 3 hosting accounts and had to configure a VPS at a new host.

SHARED HOSTING :

Hostgator is still tops for me for shared hosting. The more I have dealt with other hosting companies support, the more I realize how superior Host Gator’s support is for response time. I have only used Hostgator’s shared plan and I have maxed out a couple shared accounts there due to bandwidth usage and size of files on my account (I was over 80,000 inodes on the account) that it began to effect page load speeds.  I will say that no other shared hosting provider had ever let me load as much and use a much CPU/bandwidth as Hostgator does. (Stay away from Super Green and Just Host)

Many shared hosting providers will advertise unlimited everything but in the fine print the thing that will usually get you is CPU usage. If you are loading lots of files like a website where visitors download from your site or you have higher traffic, then you will probably hit the CPU limits and some hosts without warning will just freeze your account.  The main issue I faced with “cheap” shared hosting was their load speed and server timing out. Some hosts overload their shared servers. I never experienced that among my 6 Host Gator accounts.

Also, Hostgator shared hosting servers have all the latest software and behind-the-scenes server side software/settings that a lot of various wordpress plugins and software need to run vs. other hosts I have did not have the right software/settings and created errors and back-and-forth replies with tech support.

I opened a test shared hosting account with Cool Handle Hosting so I could test some new autoblog and twitter software. They have a deal this month where shared hosting starts at only $10 for entire year. So far the support has been decent but slower than Hostgator, but the servers seem to load fast and I am running 2 sites right now on it with up to 50 posts a day between 2 sites with images in each post.

I will probably max it would pretty quick because like I said above if my site has lots of videos or images that need to load every time a visitor clicks on the page then you can sucks up CPU and Bandwidth pretty quick. Overall though Cool Handle has been good and they are responsive with requests. If you can get the $10 for entire year, it is well worth it.

Reseller Hosting

I honestly have never done reseller hosting because they have the same CPU usage and Inode(file) limits as shared hosting so whats the point of paying $25 for Reseller hosting when I could have 3 shared hosting accounts spread across 3 different shared servers/IP’s where each shared hosting plan has its own CPU limits. For autoblogging with lots of sites I would rather just have 3 shared accounts for the same cost as 1 reseller account. I would blow up a reseller account too fast.

Virtual Private Servers (VPS)

I spent some time reading reviews on VPS and from people I know that run some memory intensive autoblogging software, Liquid Web and ServInt are good for support. I ended up though going with Future Hosting because they offered more for the money and have good reputation also.

Configuring a VPS takes more hands on approach managing the account than shared and future hosting has been decent if you have some knowledge with WHM and setting up a nameserver, but for a newbie they don’t have phone support so you have to just deal with email back and forth.

They are pretty responsive though and I would recommend them. The other VPS I have heard good things about but haven’t used are KnownHost and WiredTree.

If you are new to hosting or coming from dealing with bad “cheap” shared hosting, go with Hostgator. Realize when you google “Best Shared Hosting” or “Hosting Review” or “Worst Hosting” that all those search results sites are affiliate sites that are just pushing hosts with the best payouts. For example many push Just Host/Super Green. I know of at least 20 people who had to dump Super Green and Just Host because their servers were down a lot, pages would time out, and support was horrible(overseas) . I had 2 Super Green Accounts and dumped them after only 3 weeks because I had multiple days of their servers being down. It was awful(in fact when you cancel they offer you a entire free year of hosting to stay with them and I still canceled). In fact I have seen entire forum threads full of people complaining about Super Green.

Building a Website – XsitePro vs WordPress

Building a Website – XsitePro vs WordPress

Building a website continues to get easier for people without programming expertise. There are lots of software programs to help you build a website, some can be complicated and someare quite easy.

The easier avenues for affiliate marketers or small businesses are XsitePro and WordPress.

XsitePro creates HTML “Static” websites that are clean/simple but optimized for search engines. Some affiliate marketers like using Xsite Pro for sales landing pages.

If you want traffic to your site, then don’t bother with fancy websites with moving images and blinking Flashy things requiring the latest media plugins to even get the homepage to play. That is a quick way to lose traffic/potential customers.

The easiest and FREE METHOD for building internet marketing websites is with WordPress. WordPress is an opensource software platform that was originally for blogging websites but has evolved with thousands of software add-ons and functions that allow you to create almost anything on a website. Also search engines love wordpress sites so they are very good for generating traffic.

It is a little intimidating first starting out with wordpress because there are so many add-ons/configurations, but there are forums you can search for answers or there is a product that provides informative step-by-step videos for using wordpress. Like anything you get better the more you do it (or the more sites your build).

WordPress is excellent for affiliate marketers because there are tons of add-on software products (in WordPress they are called “Plug-ins”) that are geared for adding essential functionality for any affiliate marketing website. The layouts/design templates for wordpress are called themes and can easily be manipulated to meet your needs. (this site was created on wordpress). You can put up great wordpress sites all for free.

Many of the good software plug-ins for WordPress are geared to automating many of the processes required for building a sustainable internet website that will continue to bring in new traffic.

I own XsitePro and bought it when I first started in Internet marketing but haven’t touched it since using wordpress.

One idea i got from a fellow affiliate marketer though for Xsite pro is using it to build small niche websites for local business. It is not too hard making a clean, niche keyword focused website for a local business and charge a couple grand(way cheaper than what fancy web designers charge) and the site will run on autopilot since it is static(content isn’t changing). You just need to know what you are doing 1st though on keyword research.

XsitePro is good if you want to create small, niche websites with very targeted keywords but wordpress is much more scalable and customizable for affiliate marketers. Some web designers just use XsitePro instead of fancier/complicated programs like Dreamweaver.

I realize I only touched on the basics but Xsite Pro and WordPress are both excellent ways to build a website. Both take a little figuring out but for internet marketing I would just go with WordPress as the add-ons/capability is endless.

www.cluelessaffiliate.com

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