TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Ask HN: Best cheap hosting for a low traffic local business?

8 pointsby tontoa4over 16 years ago
I've been building some websites lately for small local businesses that want an internet presence. For simplicity, I have the clients register the domain and pay for the hosting themselves. Where should I direct them to buy the hosting?<p>Thanks all. Nick

8 comments

mseebachover 16 years ago
Don't let clients anywhere near their own domains and hosting.<p>Before you know it, you're drenched in trouble, trying to get some hack-cheap-registrar to unlock domains or whatever, while the client is desperate because his e-mail doesn't work, or figuring out why the website broke, only to find out the boss's nephew tried to install a BT tracker on the site, and by the way, no, he doesn't have a backup, didn't you take care of that?<p>Get a small VPS at SliceHost and host the sites yourself. Forward their e-mail to GMail accounts, or setup apps for your domain. Charge $20 a month, paid a year in advance. One billing round a year, if it takes you more than half a morning, you're doing it wrong.<p>The only point of contact the client has is you, the only bill he gets is from you, and you're pretty soon pocketing a few $100 a month simply by not screwing up the server.
评论 #482899 未加载
redrobot5050over 16 years ago
Make sure the client knows what they're doing with regards to a web presence: E.g. they can manage e-mail / hosting set ups. If they don't, they're likely to get burned, even with your advice.<p>I would advise getting a small VPS from Slicehost. Set it up so that it automatically backs up (they charge like $5/month to do machine replication, but having an always-ready-to-go daily backup of your client's machine should be a closer).<p>If you're going to go for old-school hobbyist shared-hosting, I'd suggest Myhosting.com or <a href="http://www.nobullshithosting.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.nobullshithosting.com/</a><p>I'd also advise you to stay away from Dreamhost.com. Their servers have terrible bandwidth, lose emails, and their TOS is ridiculously restrictive to the point where they can justify closing your account for any reason -- the primary one being that you're actually costing them more they're paying (e.g. using more than half the "promised" 500GBs of space their $9.99/month account gives you).
mikeyurover 16 years ago
I tend to point any clients that want low cost hosting towards GeekStorage.com - they have a $35/yr plan. Another is A Small Orange, but I have had much more problems with ASO than I have with GeekStorage.<p>If you're looking for something 'beefier' - I'm currently with WebFaction.com - awesome guys, great if you need some cheap hosting for your Django/Rails apps (and don't want to pay for a VPS)
RobGRover 16 years ago
All the cheap hosting places suck. Dealing with the customer and the non-responsive $5 / mo hosting place takes more time and effort than just hosting it yourself.<p>If they are truly low traffic, just host them yourself on a business class connection. You can pack a lot of low traffic websites on one machine. Graphics will load slowly unless you pay for more bandwidth, and you have to do your own backups, of course. Have your customers buy the domain themselves, but then have them log into godaddy or whoever they used and do the setup yourself.<p>Should the business relationship end, they control the domain and can just point it somewhere else, and you can mail their backup to them on a CD, and thus not be accused of holding anything hostage.
pgover 16 years ago
Why not Weebly?
评论 #482788 未加载
silvestrovover 16 years ago
Whoever you choose, make sure you always have an up-to-date local backup of everything on the site. Cheap webhosting is prone to loosing customer files when something goes wrong.
theklubover 16 years ago
I use Apisnetworks.com. You can add as many domains as you want to one account. Servers are fast and I haven't had any problems with them.
pclarkover 16 years ago
A Small Orange are great :)