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Lifetime Hosting Flipbook PDF

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4 Questions To Ask Yourself About Lifetime Web Hosting

Pay one price for the lifetime of your account!" On the surface the deal appears to be good. However, is it? There are several questions you must ask yourself before you think about this type of deal, because you may not get your money's worth from it and you may experience some other unfortunate effects. So how do you know if life web hosting is right for you?

1. How long are you going to have your web hosting accounts? The very first question to ask yourself is how long will you've got a hosting account for your specific website you're building? How most lifetime hosting provides work is they decide how long (in months) an average customer stays with their organization and multiply that amount by their monthly selling price to get a web hosting account. They will then use that amount to determine how much to charge as a 1 time hosting fee.

If you are simply planning to get your account for 1 year or not, it probably isn't worthwhile to buy a lifetime web hosting account, as you'll be charged a premium for your hosting account.

If you plan on maintaining your account for over two or three decades, it can be worth the price tag, but you'll need to answer the following questions to find out if a lifetime hosting account is for you.

2. Is your site going to need a lot of resources? If you anticipate having a website that has a high quantity of traffic, or may actively use a database, you might want to re-think your buy. Companies that sell life hosting accounts earn money from you, but their costs happen every month. Because of this, they have to continue to sell lifetime web hosting accounts so as to make enough income to pay their costs, which gives them a powerful reason to minimize.

Among the costs, is server space and capacity. The more servers that a hosting firm has, the more their monthly expenses are. One way to reduce their costs, is to place more hosting accounts on a server than it could reasonably handle with the anticipation that most sites will not use the full capacity of the account.

The outcome is that websites on these servers tend to be slower than average, and if you have a site which has a lot of traffic, many of your visitors might have trouble getting to your website, and will leave before your web page shows up in their browser.

Whether this circumstance is not important for you, another question is certainly one you should be asking yourself.

3. What is the refund policy of the hosting company? Since many of the servers within those lifetime hosting firms are overloaded, they generally take a zero tolerance policy on any internet site that causes any excess load on the machine, which may cause it to crash, and it can be a 1 strike and your out, without a refund.

On over-extended servers, (servers using more hosting accounts on these than they have capacity for), it is extremely simple to make an overload on the server. It can be as straightforward as using a great deal

of page views out of the traffic the site receives, or having your blog assaulted by a bunch of robot scripts hoping to post comment spam to your site. There's nothing you can do about it in such cases, but it can give rise to a server that's already at it's limit, to crash.

If it happens after just 6 months in to your web hosting contract, then you may be totally out of luck and have your site shut down with no refund. In cases like this, it would have been a very expensive hosting service. Make sure you check the terms of service prior to buying this type of hosting.

4. Do you anticipate a high degree of customer services? The grade of the customer service goes along with the theme of decreasing costs. One of the first places most clients experience in expense cutting is the level of consumer services. A lot of the time, client support is outsourced and abroad. There may be language obstacles to contend with as well as some flaws in getting your questions answered, and issues solved. Sometimes you might have to deal with less experienced hosting administrators, but by no means do you locate the less experienced customer service agents only in the lifetime web hosting arena.

This is an important aspect to think about because when the customer support is really bad, you may be forced to depart the hosting business and walk away from your hosting investment. Be sure to get as much information as you can about the particular company you're thinking about, particularly their degree of customer service along with their technical competency.

When asking the question, "Is lifetime lifetime hosting right for me?" , how long you plan on having your web site up, and a few other factors like how significant are matters like customer service to you. In a limited number of circumstances, lifetime web hosting can be a deal as it's better than free hosting, but if you step outside the limited scenarios, you might end up paying a lot more than you bargained for.