Tag Archives: your-website

RSHosting 🚀 Fully Managed KVM SSD VPS 🚀 Upgraded Plans 🚀 30% Off 🚀 Free LiteSpeed 🚀 US / UK

Keep your website upgraded and optimized with evolving web hosting technology, by hosting it on one of the best cloud platform, powered by K… | Read the rest of http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1751468&goto=newpost Continue reading

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Free Webinars You Don’t Want to Miss in February

The post Free Webinars You Don’t Want to Miss in February appeared first on HostGator Blog . The HostGator team is pleased to announce not one, but two, FREE webinars we’re hosting this month to help you get more out of your website and web hosting! Learn more and RSVP at the links below: February 13: Build Your Website with the Gator Website Builder! It’s now easier than ever to build a professionally-designed, reliable website without needing a ton of technical skills – thanks to the new Gator Website Builder from HostGator! Join us February 13th for a FREE webinar as the product team from HostGator.com demos the powerful new Gator Website Builder.It’s time to make your website dreams a reality. Register now . February 20: Live Demo: HostGator’s New Customer Portal The updated HostGator Customer Portal arrives March 2019, with an intuitive new look designed to make your life easier, so you can get back to focusing on what matters – creating great content for your website and managing your business. Join us February 20th for a FREE webinar where we’ll share an exclusive sneak peek and guided demo of the new customer portal. Register now. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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7 Things You Can Do with Gator Website Builder

The post 7 Things You Can Do with Gator Website Builder appeared first on HostGator Blog . Choosing the right website builder can be a little overwhelming. You’ve got a lot of options and reviewing the different features in each can lead to as much confusion as it does answers, especially if you’re new to building websites and don’t really know what you’re looking for. To help you out, we’ll explain seven useful things you can do with our new Gator Website Builder in clear terms anyone can understand—no confusing jargon for beginners or vague references to features you don’t really understand, just simple explanations of actions you can take once you invest in Gator. 1. Choose from hundreds of mobile-friendly designs. Part of what makes website builders easy to use is that you can start from a template—that’s a design that gets the basic structure and style of your website in place. Then all you have to do is change what’s there to bring it in line with what you want. Gator provides over 200 templates that have been designed by professionals that each: Are responsive , which means that the template can adapt to whatever browser or device size your visitors come from. You don’t have to do anything extra to make sure your website is mobile friendly, since you’ll be starting with a responsive design. Adhere to web design best practices. You don’t have to learn all the tips for what people respond to best in a website, because our designers have already done that and made sure your website design incorporates what works. Are useful for common website purposes . Whether you’re starting a small jewelry eCommerce business, building a website for your auto shop, or launching a photography blog , you can find a template designed with your purpose in mind. Having a good template to start with goes a long way to making the rest of the process of building your website easier. Gator has you covered on that front.   2. Personalize your website’s style and color scheme. With Gator’s intuitive editing software, you can easily change out the colors of your template to bring them in line with the color scheme you have in mind. Changing colors is as simple as clicking on the element you want to change, clicking on the color icon in the menu, and choosing your color. You can change the general layout of the page by clicking on “Change Design” and selecting from the options provided. You can change the background image, add in visual effects, or even bring an animation component in with the Style section. And you can move different parts of the page by clicking on the element you want to move, dragging it to the place you want it to be, and dropping it there. Even though you start from someone else’s design, you can quickly and easily make the website’s look and style your own with these intuitive features.   3. Load unique images, media, and copy. The other easy way to make the website your own is to add your original images and media to the site. Loading your own logo, photographs, or images you designed yourself is easy enough. You can use them to replace images already in the template, or drag them to the spot you want them to be in. You’ll also need to update the placeholder text in the template with words that accurately reflect what your website is all about and why your visitors should care. Simply highlight the text that’s there and type in new words. Or, to add text where there the template doesn’t have any yet, choose text in the Elements section of the menu and select either heading (for larger text that will introduce a section of the page) or paragraph (for smaller, longer blocks of text that provide more detail).   4. Easily find free stock photos. Images are a crucial component of any website. Not only do they make your web pages look better, but they play a big role in how people interact with them—to the degree that 80% are more likely to read your content if you include an image and they’re 64% more likely to remember what they read. But finding good, affordable images to use for your website can be a difficult and time consuming process. And it’s even more challenging if you’re hoping to stick with images you can use for free—unless you use Gator. Gator comes with dozens of stock images included. Each time you want to add an image to a page, you’ll have the option to click on a tab that says Stock Images, and browse photographs that are divided into useful categories. Easy access to a variety of high-quality images can make your life much easier when designing a new website.   5. Create and manage a blog. Blogs are useful for all sorts of websites. If you’re building a personal site, it’s a good way to share your thoughts with the world. For business sites, blogging is a powerful marketing tool. And for anyone who wants their website to be easy for visitors to find, it’s one of the best ways to help your website show up more often in Google . For anyone using Gator, adding and maintaining a blog is simple. You can choose your blog design and add new posts in the same menu you use for the rest of designing your website. Consistently writing really great blog posts that your visitors will love will still take time and work, but the technical side of things is taken care of when you use Gator.   6. Set up a store. Not everyone building a website needs eCommerce capability, but if you want the ability to sell products or services through your website and securely accept payment, then these features are a must. In Gator, a simple upgrade enables you to list your products, include a shopping cart, and set up a secure checkout experience for your customers. If you want your website to start making you money fast, Gator provides all the functionality you need without requiring any special skills.   7. Track your visits and visitor actions. If you want your website to be successful, you should pay attention to how people interact with it. Gator puts useful website analytics right in the same dashboard you use for the rest of your web design and management, including: The number of people who have visited your site How many of them are visiting for the first time (unique visitors) How many different page visits you got (which tells you how many visitors went to more than one page while on your website) And how many visitors clicked away soon after coming to your website (your bounce rate ) That information will help you understand if your website is doing what you want it to . If you’re not getting as many visitors as you want, you can figure out the best online marketing strategy to make it easier for people to find you. And if people aren’t sticking around or taking the actions you want once they’re on the site, you know to change up how your site looks or what your pages say to see if you get better results.   Get Your Website Going with Gator Website Builder Gator provides advanced capabilities accessible with a beginner’s level of knowledge. And it’s not only affordable, with plans starting at $3.95 a month, but it also comes with web hosting included in the price. That saves you time and trouble, while helping you get your awesome new website up ASAP. Build your website with Gator now. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading

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Do I Need Web Hosting?

The post Do I Need Web Hosting? appeared first on HostGator Blog . If you’re thinking about starting a website, then you may have come across the term “web hosting” without entirely understanding what that means. When you see that web hosting usually comes at a cost, you may start to wonder, “ Do I need web hosting? ” The short answer is: yes. If you want to have a website, you need web hosting . But you may feel better about the expense involved if you understand what website hosting is all about. What is Web Hosting? We talk about the web like it’s something that exists outside of physical space. Terms like “cyberspace” and “the cloud” reinforce the idea that the many sites we access on our devices don’t live anywhere physical – they’re floating out there somewhere, as if on the air. In fact, every website that exists on the internet takes up physical space on a web server somewhere. But those web servers are out of sight for most of us—kept in storage facilities around the world that few web users have cause to visit. Even though we don’t see or think about those servers much, they’re a necessary part of our internet experience. And the service they provide for websites—storing them and making the  the site’s content accessible to people around the world online—is what we call web hosting. In a nutshell, that’s how web hosting works .   Why Do Websites Need Web Hosting? When you learn how to build a website on a specific device (or a couple), it lives on those devices. When you’re ready to publish it for the larger world to see, it has to move beyond the specific devices you own that only you have access to. But it still needs to live somewhere. Web hosting servers are the space where your website can live and be stored while being accessible on the larger web. If you want your website to be live online—in other words, if you want anyone other than you to see it—then a website hosting package is a necessary part of the equation.   Do I Need a Web Hosting Service? For most websites, web hosting is provided by a web hosting company that owns and maintains many servers and allows customers to essentially rent space on them. You pay the web hosting provider either monthly or annually for that space and, in return, they keep your website up and running. If the idea of spending money on a continual basis for your website is frustrating, you may wonder if there’s a way to get around having to pay someone else for web hosting services. While it’s technically possible for a business or individual to purchase and maintain their own private web server, it’s expensive and impractical for the vast majority of website owners. Servers require maintenance, proper climate control, and advanced skills to manage. Plus, the amount of bandwidth required to host your own website on a server launches you far beyond what most internet plans will allow for an individual or SMB business. Since bandwidth relates directly to speed and uptime, having enough of it is an important part of keeping your website accessible to visitors. A web hosting company has already made the investment in: The servers themselves The space required to store them The precautions necessary to protect the servers from overheating or inclement weather The amount of bandwidth required to keep the servers functioning consistently and speedily The skilled professionals needed to provide proper maintenance as needs arise The cost of replacing and upgrading servers as needed Because this is their business, covering all those bases is just part of the job for them, while it would involve considerable expense and inconvenience for you. This hardware is just one of the many benefits of using web hosting .   What About Free Web Hosting? You know by now that you need web hosting, but do you really have to pay for it? Some searches online may reveal free platforms you can build your website on that come with hosting or free web hosting providers. Why not just go with one of them? There may be cases where it makes sense to choose a free web hosting package—if you’re just starting a website for fun and aren’t too concerned about building it into something long lasting or profitable, for instance. But for anyone with big goals or hopes for your website, it’s a choice that comes with serious risks. Free hosting has more limitations. Free platforms and hosting plans tend to offer fewer customization and branding options. If you want to be able to design and build a website to your own preferences and specifications, you won’t have much leeway to do so with these. That’s especially true with free platforms like Tumblr or Blogger where you’re working within a set structure. You can’t change much more than the colors, backgrounds, and the content on the page. If your website will be for a business or a personal brand you want to grow an audience for, then those limitations will cause a real issue with branding. You’ll have to work that much harder to differentiate your website from the platform in the eyes of your visitors. And there are limitations beyond design. Free hosting means less storage than paid hosting options. You’ll be limited in the number of files you can add to the site, especially when it comes to media that tends toward larger file sizes like video and audio. You’ll also lose out on some of the functionality websites often need, like setting up URL redirects or creating custom error pages. You won’t have the same options for keeping backups of your site or keeping it secure. While the features and options available with different free hosting options will vary, there’s a good chance some or all of these limitations will apply. Make sure you know what you’re getting (and not) before you sign up.   It may not really be free. Some web hosting services use a “free” offer to get you signed up, but once you get started, you realize you can’t actually do much of anything with the free web hosting plan. To actually launch your site and have access to the features you need, you have to upgrade to one of their paid plans.   Since they’ve already got you hooked, you could end feeling stuck with them, even if it’s not the best deal or they’re not the most reliable web hosting provider out there. In many cases, they won’t even allow you to take what you’ve built and transfer it to a new provider. If you do decide to switch, you could be stuck building a new site from scratch.   It’s not really your website. When your website lives on another platform, you’re bound to the platform’s rules and way of doing things. In most cases, that means you won’t have your own domain. A good example of this is with free WordPress.org hosting. Instead of www.yourdomain.com , your url will look something like www.yourdomain.platformname.com . This is one reason why many people opt to get web hosting for WordPress sites —so they can have a branded domain name while still enjoying the functionality of WordPress. It also usually means you won’t be able to use branded email addresses specific to your domain name, something that makes your brand look more professional and established. Often it can even mean your provider serves up ads on your website, which makes it look more cluttered and less legitimate.  And if the platform decides to change its features or rules, you’re at their mercy. You may lose out on some functionality you took for granted. When you’re not paying for hosting, you just don’t own the site in quite the same way. You have less control and more risk. You could lose everything. If your platform or provider decides they don’t want your site there anymore – whether it’s because you’ve broken one of their rules or they’ve just changed the way they do things — there’s not a lot you can do. Your website can be wiped out completely and you’ll have to start from scratch. Even if that kind of worst-case scenario doesn’t happen, free hosting providers won’t generally provide tech support. If you start having trouble with your website due to run-of-the-mill tech problems, or worse, hackers, you don’t have anyone to turn to. Your options will be limited and you may find you need to start from scratch with a paid service after all. It’s better to start with a service you can continue using in the long haul (and that makes it possible to take your website with you if you do leave) to begin with.   What Does Web Hosting Cost? So you’ve accepted you need web hosting from a legitimate web hosting provider.  Now you need to figure out how to budget it for it. The question of how much web hosting costs is a bit complicated, because there are a wide variety of plans and options. What you spend will depend on what provider you go with, the type of plan you determine you need, and the features you want included. To give you a general idea though, here are the main types of hosting options you have and the price ranges you should have in mind for each. Shared Hosting This is the most affordable option and the most common choice for new websites. Shared hosting plans start at around $2-3 a month for the most basic plans. But you can expect the price to go up to around $5-10 if you want to access additional features like: The ability to host multiple domains Additional bandwidth or storage space Unlimited email addresses An SSL certificate for security Automated backups A website builder Some web hosting providers, like HostGator, include these extra features for free with your shared hosting plan, saving you money and providing you with a better deal. You can enjoy branded email addresses and secure SSL certificates , all as part of your shared hosting plan. With a shared hosting plan, you rent space on a server that will be shared with a number of other websites that use the same web hosting provider. That works just fine for many websites, but some will find they need a hosting plan that can offer more storage or bandwidth. eCommerce Hosting If you’re planning to sell products through your website, then you need to make sure your web hosting plan will provide all the features you need to do so securely. eCommerce hosting plans tend to start at around $5-20 a month for more basic plans and can go up to over $250 a month depending on the features you want to include. Any eCommerce plan needs to either include or be compatible with eCommerce software that provides: Shopping cart functionality Checkout functionality A way to accept secure payments You’ll also definitely need an SSL certificate, and will probably want to invest in additional security software such as Sitelock , too.   Cloud Hosting Cloud hosting plans typically cost in the range of $5-50 and can be a good choice for website owners that expect more traffic or need more storage space than shared hosting provides. Cloud hosting promises faster load times, fewer storage limitations, and easier scalability than shared hosting. If you’re expecting (or hoping) that your website will grow in traffic soon after you launch, then it may be a better option than shared hosting plans.   VPS Hosting VPS plans are the next step up. They’re in the range of $20-$100 a month. With these plans, your website is still sharing a server with other websites, but with far fewer than on a shared plan, so you get access to a larger share of the server. For websites that get too much traffic or need more storage than shared or cloud hosting plans provide, a VPS is the next step. Dedicated Server When you invest in a dedicated server for your website, you no longer have to share with any other websites. You get all the resources, bandwidth, and storage the server provides for yourself (but you still get to outsource the maintenance work and costs to your web hosting provider). When your website grows to the point that you need the level of power that a dedicated server provides, you can expect to pay anywhere from $80 a month to over $1,000. Don’t worry. Most website don’t have to worry about spending that kind of money on web hosting, but for especially popular sites or established brands, it may be the best option. Yes, You Need Web Hosting In summary, if you’ve asked yourself, “do I need web hosting?” then you know now that the answer is a clear yes. If you’re going to learn how to start a website , then know that web hosting is needed and a part of the whole process of creating a site. If you have goals for your website beyond having a little fun with it, then you need to take some time to identify and invest in the right web hosting plan for what you need. It’s a small cost for the security and control you’ll get out of the deal (especially if your website will be helping you make money). If you’re finding all the options a little overwhelming (and we don’t blame you), we can help. HostGator has knowledgeable customer support staff available 24/7 who can answer any questions you have about web hosting. We can guide you toward the best plan and feature options for your needs and budget. Find the post on the HostGator Blog 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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