Tag Archives: business

[UK] Microsoft Office 365 Plans | Starting at £2.75/mo – MilesWeb

An effective tool for your business, Digital technologies are changing the way we work. One of them is Office 365. The era of investing hund… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1747727&goto=newpost Continue reading

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WordPress: Managed Dedicated High Traffic Cloud Setup. HA Cluster for 1MM to 200MM+ Visitors

[B][COLOR=”Navy”]UNIXy takes a truly different approach from the rest in the market. We take full ownership of IT matters for your business…. | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1747513&goto=newpost Continue reading

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2019! All-Inclusive Managed Servers. We Manage Everything from A to Z. Business Turnkey Inside!

All-Inclusive Managed Server [B][COLOR=”Navy”]Have your business idea fleshed out but n… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1747320&goto=newpost Continue reading

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Do I Need Dedicated Hosting?

The post Do I Need Dedicated Hosting? appeared first on HostGator Blog . Your website has been growing. That’s great news! It’s exactly what you hoped for when you first launched. But the growing traffic and storage needs are starting to put a strain on your bandwidth. If your visitors have to wait for the page to load—or worse, it doesn’t open at all for them— your business will take a hit. If you can’t load all the design elements, media, and pages you need, you’ll keep hitting up against the limitations of what your website can do.  And as your sales and reputation grow, the stakes for potential security threats loom larger. As your website grows, at a certain point you’ll face the question: Do I need dedicated hosting ? What Is Dedicated Hosting? Every website requires web hosting to be accessible to visitors online. In order for people to see a website in the virtual world, it has to be hosted on a server stored somewhere in the physical world. Any website that invests in this type of hosting has one of these servers entirely to themselves. There are a couple of different forms that a server can take. A business that has a strong IT department staffed with people who know how to properly manage and care for a website hosting server may own their own server and store it on their property. But more commonly, businesses turn to managed dedicated hosting , which means that you rent a full server from a web hosting provider that takes care of all the storage and maintenance of the server for you.   How Dedicated Hosting is Different from Other Options It’s easier to understand what dedicated hosting is and why you might need it if you have a solid understanding of your other options. Many websites start by getting shared hosting, the most affordable web host option. For smaller websites that don’t get that much traffic, shared hosting means you share one server with many other websites—sometimes dozens or even hundreds of websites on one server. While that sounds like a lot, one server can handle a good amount of bandwidth and for many small businesses or personal websites this option works just fine. But with this option, your website’s performance is slightly dependent on what’s happening with the other websites on the server. If one or more of the websites you share the server with has a day of abnormally heavy traffic, your website could face downtime or slow loading times. As a website grows in popularity or complexity, sharing the resources of one server with so many others won’t make sense. The next step up is a VPS hosting plan , where you still share the server with multiple other websites, but there are fewer sites on the server and your portion of it is blocked off from theirs. This way, you’re no longer affected by what’s happening on the other websites. But your website’s performance can still be hurt by your own site having higher traffic and storage needs than your portion of the server can handle. When your website grows to the point where a VPS plan no longer suffices, that’s when you need to upgrade to a dedicated server . Want to share our web hosting infographic? Click to enlarge. What is Dedicated IP Hosting? Dedicated IP hosting sounds similar to dedicated hosting, but it’s a different type of service. While your domain address is the main way you identify your site and the way your visitors find you, your website also has an IP address. All computers, mobile devices, and website servers have IP addresses. An IP address is a sequence of numbers divided by periods that devices use to communicate with each other and the larger web (they look something like 111.222.333.444). With normal shared hosting, the websites that share a server will also share an IP address. If you want your website to have a unique IP, you’ll need to specifically get dedicated IP hosting.  Here are the benefits of dedicated IP hosting : You can get a SSL certificate. Any website that accepts sensitive information through the site, especially financial information like credit card numbers, needs an SSL certificate to ensure their visitors’ information will be properly encrypted. Without an SSL, your business looks less trustworthy and you put your visitors at risk—especially for ecommerce businesses. A dedicated IP is one of the main ways to ensure your website will qualify for an SSL certificate. (Note that it used to be the only way, but in recent years some services offer Server Name Indication as an alternate option).    You don’t have to worry about the email blacklist. Sending spam emails doesn’t just risk annoying the recipients, it can also get you blacklisted by email providers. When they notice a lot of emails marked spam coming from a particular IP address, they’ll often remove the IP from their safe list and stop delivering the emails. Usually that’s good for consumers and gives businesses a good reason to play by the rules, but if you happen to share an IP with another website that breaks the rules—you could be penalized. With a dedicated IP, you don’t have to worry about being held accountable for another company’s bad email behavior. You can get dedicated IP hosting without investing in a dedicated server. So if these are the main reasons you’re considering dedicated hosting, save some money by just upgrading to a dedicated IP with your shared hosting plan instead. Both of these benefits are also included with dedicated hosting though, along with the others we’ll discuss.   How Much Does Dedicated Hosting Cost? The main reason dedicated hosting isn’t for everyone is the cost. Where shared server hosting can start at less than $3 a month, dedicated hosting costs start at around $80 a month and goes up to over $100 for most reputable web hosting providers and plans. If you don’t actually need dedicated web hosting for your business, then that price tag won’t make much sense. But for businesses that have reached the point where dedicated hosting is warranted, the cost will be well worth it.   How to Know If You Need Dedicated Hosting So now we get to the main question at hand: how do you actually know if you need dedicated web hosting for your website? There are three main warning signs that may suggest it’s time to upgrade to a dedicated server.   1. Your website is loading too slowly. Website speed matters . A lot. And if you want your visitors to keep coming back, you need to be aware of the different ways to speed up your website . Over half of your visitors will leave if your site takes longer than 3 seconds to load, and many won’t even wait that long. Oh, and a slow website will hurt your SEO rankings on top of that, which means fewer visitors to begin with. One of the biggest factors in site speed is your choice in hosting provider and plan. If you’re trying to run a hugely popular website on shared hosting, then your server will be overwhelmed and your visitors will suffer for it. To keep your website speed up to the expectations of your visitors, you need a website hosting solution that’s appropriate to the level of traffic you get. If you’ve outgrown shared web hosting and VPS hosting, then it’s time to switch to dedicated hosting.   2. You’re running out of storage space. Small businesses that have just a few pages will never have to worry about this. But as a website grows to include thousands of pages, media features like video and audio files, hundreds of high-resolution product images, or advanced features like   creating a website forum —you’ll find yourself hitting up against the amount of storage space allowed on shared and VPS plans. If you still have big plans for ways to grow your website, but only limited space to work with on the plan you have now, then consider going with a dedicated server instead.   3. You’re worried about vulnerability to hackers. While many shared and VPS hosting server plans backed by respected web hosting providers are secure, a step up to a dedicated server is a quick and easy way to increase your website’s security even further. When you share a server with other websites, your site becomes more vulnerable if one of their websites is hit with a DDoS attack or otherwise accessed by hackers. While most good web hosting providers have firewalls in place to avoid that and strategies to resolve the issue quickly if it occurs, the more popular and profitable your website gets, the more important it is to reduce all risks and keep your website working efficiently and securely 100% of the time. A dedicated server reduces your vulnerability so you can count on a site that’s up and running more of the time, without any problems.   Managed Dedicated Hosting Makes Things Easy Any type of dedicated server will provide the benefits described here, but if your business doesn’t have the proper facilities to store a server, or the expert staff needed to maintain it, trying to manage a dedicated server on your own will cause more problems than it solves. You can get the same convenience that businesses using shared hosting do by outsourcing  that work to a web hosting company that’s already invested in the facilities and professional staff required to efficiently and effectively keep a dedicated server running perfectly. And you can count on proactive security updates and customer support that steps in the moment a problem arises to help you solve it. If it’s time for your website to upgrade to a dedicated server, HostGator offers plans that start at $119 and pack in all the most important features enterprise websites need to thrive. Let us be your go-to service provider for all of your web hosting needs. Get Started With HostGator! Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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7 Ways to Improve Site Speed and Performance in 2019

The post 7 Ways to Improve Site Speed and Performance in 2019 appeared first on HostGator Blog . You go to a website and it feels like it is taking forever to load. What do you do? Do you wait patiently for the webpage to load in its entirety? Or do you simply close the browser tab and move on with your life? The fact of the matter is that page load time not only has a dramatic impact on user experience, but it also greatly impacts conversion rates, as well as search engine optimization. Regardless of the type of website that you have —whether it’s a blog, an e-commerce store, an online forum, or an affiliate landing page—it is in your best interest to provide the fastest site speed and performance possible. But how do you get there? Here are seven tips that you can use to reduce those load times and boost the user experience on your website in 2019. 1. Use a Content Delivery Network There are certainly a lot of steps you can take in terms of the actual content on your website. You can shrink images and optimize your JavaScript. But you also have to consider where your servers are located relative to the users who are accessing them. The Internet isn’t wholly virtual, because physical space must still be traversed. It is substantially faster for someone in Los Angeles to access to a server in San Francisco than it is for that same person to reach a server in London or even Chicago. The goal of a content delivery network, or CDN for short, is to improve website performance by picking a server that’s closest to the end user. We recommend you take a look at the way a CDN works , to get a better understanding on not only how the concept works, by also why it’s being used my the majority of top sites on the internet today. That’s where there’s a whole network to deliver this content. The best CDNs take this further by offering higher-speed storage, optimization tools, intelligent and dynamic caching, and security features to optimize performance even further. You’ll want a CDN with great global network coverage and high availability solutions. The pro plan from Incapsula starts from $59 per site per month, while the business plan goes for $299 per site per month.   2. Smush Your Images It probably won’t surprise you to learn that loading images can be one of the most taxing activities in terms of site speed and performance. Part of this has to do with resolution, but it also has to do with the level of image compression and other factors as well. There’s no real reason to upload and display a massive 20-megapixel photo if you’re just going to resize and show it as a thumbnail that’s only 200 pixels wide. You can start from the images you actually upload to your server in the first place. Generally speaking, you don’t need images that are several megabytes in size. Depending on circumstances, you can get away with 200 KB or less with no real discernible loss in quality for most users. Another great approach is a WordPress plugin called Smush . The goal is to cut “all the unnecessary data without slowing down your site.” 3. Shrink Your JavaScript and CSS One of the first and easiest places for you to look in terms of improving page load times is by addressing unnecessary inefficiencies in your site’s code. More specifically, JavaScript (JS) and Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) can be very inefficient in their default code. There’s a lot of white space, for starters, and several lines of redundant code can be reduced down to something much shorter. As you can imagine, the less code a browser (and server) need to run through, the faster the page should load. If you have a WordPress site, it’s easiest if you use a plugin like WP Super Minify to do this for you. You’ll want to make a full website backup before you do, of course. As recommended by many of the top CSS sites , if you have a different kind of site or you’d rather just do it manually, there are several online tools that can do this to. Minifier is one such example. The tool works by removing whitespace, stripping comments, combining files, and optimizes/shortens a few common programming patterns.   4. Reduce HTTP Requests All else held constant, the simplest sites are going to be the ones that load the fastest. If you have a simple, plain HTML page with plain text and minimal images, it’ll probably be quite quick. If you have a dynamic page that calls upon a number of other factors and content types, you’re going to get bogged down. You can dramatically increase the speed of your site by reducing the number of HTTP requests. The cleaner the code, the better. Perfmatters is a performance-oriented plugin for WordPress that can automate most of this for you. It starts from $19.95 per year for one site, going up to $99.95 per year for unlimited sites. While many site owners and bloggers might not understand what each of these settings or commands actually are, the tool makes it extremely easy to check on or off which performance options you would like enabled.   5. Upgrade to Dedicated Hosting Most people who are just starting out with their first website, and indeed many veterans too, typically opt for shared hosting because it is usually the most cost-effective option. What this means, though, is that you are sharing resources (server and bandwidth) with other customers and you have no control over how they are using those resources. If another website on the same server suddenly sees a monumental influx of traffic, the site speed and performance of your website will suffer. There are many variables outside of your control. To overcome this, you might consider getting an advanced dedicated server . They have managed and unmanaged solutions, but the long and the short of it is that you get a server all to yourself. This allows for much greater customization, should you so desire. More importantly, you get dedicated hardware and much more consistent performance. That means faster speeds overall, especially when you opt for dedicated servers with better hardware too.   6. Enable Lazy Loading Generally speaking, when someone arrives at a webpage, the entirety of that webpage will try to load. Some elements can load simultaneously, while others must load sequentially. Depending on how the site is designed and laid out, users may experience really long loading times due to elements that they can’t even see yet (and they may not ever see). Or they’ll notice that the site is still loading in their browser, even though it looks as if the content of interest is already available. In both cases, this detracts from the user experience and hampers site speed. A way to overcome this is something called lazy loading. When lazy loading is enabled, elements on a webpage are loaded on an as-needed basis. In this way, items further down the page don’t get loaded until the user scrolls down there. This results in the perception of faster load times, as elements higher up the page are prioritized. There’s a great guide on the Google Developers Web Fundamentals section for more on this technique.   7. Minimize External Scripts Widgets can be great. They can be wonderfully convenient, updating your website with all sorts of dynamic content. Maybe you’ve got a Twitter widget in your sidebar that displays your latest tweets. Maybe you use a widget from Amazon to display featured products. There’s a world of possibility. The problem is that when you rely on these external scripts, you are also at the mercy of these external scripts for page load times. If Twitter happens to be hanging for whatever reason, then your site speed suffers as it waits for that widget to load correctly. And the same is true with all sorts of “hidden” elements on your page that rely on external services too. While it may not be completely practical to eliminate all external scripts altogether — you’d want to keep Google Analytics , for instance — it is prudent to minimize their use as to minimize their impact on page load times.   Better site performance tends to improve user engagement . Implement these tips in 2019. Your website visitors will thank you! Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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