Kevin MuldoonHosting : The Basics of Hosting a Blog

Moving from a hosted blogging solution like blogger or wordpress.com to your own domain name and hosting is a giant step towards becoming a successful blogger. You have much more control over your site and you will see a lot more search engine benefits too.

Getting a hosting package for the first time can be a daunting experience but it needn’t be. I will be talking tomorrow about ‘What you should look for in a hosting company’ but first i thought that it would be good to give you a brief understanding of the features and terms you need to understand and consider before choosing a host.

Basic Hosting Terminology

Nearly all hosting companies offer 24/7 support, promise 99.9% uptime and allow you to install certain scripts at the touch of a button (eg wordpress, phpbb) however the main things you need to look at and understand when you see a hosting package advertised is the following :

  • Disk Space – The disk space is the amount of hard drive space you have to upload your files to and is either stated in megabytes or gigbytes. For most blogs, images and movies will be the files that eat away at the space you’ve got.
  • Bandwidth – If the home page of you blog takes up 10kb and the images on the design take up 90 kb then everytime someone loads your page 100kb of bandwidth will be used every time someone views that page. Note, search engines can eat at your bandwidth too (for example with my poker forums in April 2007- googlebot took up 6.5gb of bandwidth, Ask took up 5gb and Yahoo took up 4.5gb)
  • Number of Domains – The number of domains or websites/blogs you are allowed to run in the hosting package.
  • Number of MySQL Databases – Some hosting packages restrict the number of databases you are allowed to create for your sites.

There are lots of different factors you need to consider when choosing a host but the main ones are Price, Disk Space and bandwidth.

Types of Hosting Packages

There is essentially 3 types of hosting packages available to the blogger.

  • Shared Hosting – Shared hosting is the type of package most bloggers moving to a host for the first time will need. The costs are pretty cheap with the basic starter package starting at around $5-$10 per month. What you get in your package depends on the package you choose. The cheapest entry package usually only allows you to host one blog (eg. one domain name) through the hosting but some companies let you host more. Sometimes they also restrict the number of email addresses and mysql databases you have. Again, it depends on the package you choose. For example, the hatchling pacakge at hostgator gives you 50 gb disk space, 200gb bandwidth, 1 domain and unlimited mysql databases for $6.95 per month.

    Shared hosting is a Virtual Private Server (VPS) and it sometimes labelled as such. A VPS means that you have a certain amount of webspace and allocation of bandwidth. To you it may seem that your website is hosted on its own but in reality your website is hosted on the same server as dozens if not hundreds of other websites. If for some reason the server was to go down all VPS’s on that server would also go down which would result in hundreds of websites going down as well. Don’t let this scare you though – in general VPS’s are very well run. For new bloggers i recommend BlueHost as you get a huge amount of disk space and bandwidth for only $6.95 per month.

  • Reseller Hosting – With reseller hosting you usually (but not always) get more disk space and bandwidth with the added option of being able to resell the hosting space you have to other website owners and bloggers. This obviously means that you can host your own websites as well in these other accounts. Just remember though that you will need to restrict usage in accounts because you are charged and are responsible for all accounts on your reseller package (eg. if you let a friend host a site with you and you didnt restrict the bandwidth they used they could use your whole months bandwidth in a few days!). It may surprise you to learn that Reseller Hosting packages are actually VPS’s as well. Your hosting package will be hosted with other resellers on the server. Granted there will be less people hosting on the server but the number of websites could actually be more. This kind of package should interest those who need a little more bandwidth or for people who would like to host some sites for friends etc :)
  • Dedicated Hosting – There will come a time when your blogs and websites take up too much ram and too much bandwidth and diskspace that you will have no other choice but to upgrade to your own dedicated server. A server is essentially a computer which is turned on 24 hours a day, 365 days a year to host websites and blogs. If you have a dedicated server you have one of these computers for yourself which means that you have complete control over everything. There is a huge amount of benefits in this including changing scripts when you want, rebooting the server when you need and more control over accounts and backups. You can pay for managed services or do it yourself though most people pay the extra for professionals to look after everything (including myself – i can still do everything they can but i leave the complicated stuff to the hosting company incase i mess things up). Dedicated server costs range from $100 to thousands of dollars. God only knows how much Amazon spends on hosting!!

Shared Hosting is definately the type of hosting which most new bloggers will need.

Overview

When you first make the decision to move your blog to your own host it can be pretty daunting but once you start learning the terminology and understand whats on offer its very straight forward.

If your unsure about anything leave a comment here or post a thread in the forums and ill do my best to help :)

Follow this blogger on Twitter!

Kevin Muldoon Written by Kevin Muldoon from Blog Themes Club
Posted on June 2nd, 2007 and filed under Domain Names & Hosting
Do not forget to subscribe to our RSS feed for updates
  • Digg This Post
  • Tweet This Post
  • Stumble This Post
  • Submit This Post To Delicious
  • Submit This Post To Reddit
  • Submit This Post To Mixx
  • BloggingTips Uses Aweber

15 Responses to “Hosting : The Basics of Hosting a Blog”

Author comments are in a darker gray color for you to easily identify the posts author in the comments

  1. A good basic overview – although I don’t think the number of MySQL databases should be a big issue (particularly for a blog).

    As long as you give each software script that requires a database its own prefix, you can have it run off the same database.

    Of course, you still need to ensure your hosting can cope with the increased number of connections.

    - Martin Reed

  2. I always wondered if Reseller Hosting was the same as Shared hosting or if it got it’s own server. It makes me wonder why more people don’t buy Reseller Hosting when basic shared hosting plans aren’t enough any more – I’ve seen reseller plans costing the same as more advanced shared hosting plans – except that the reseller plans have way more features.

  3. Katje says:

    One thing I’d like to add is that for BlueHost, new bloggers (and old) should be warned not to registar their domain through them. One of the selling points of BlueHost is that they include a “free” domain with the cost of buying hosting with them. What they do not tell you is that domain is registared in their name, locking you into continueing to host with them even if you do not like them. Also if you don’t renew your hosting package with them they will keep your domain for 6 months and try to resell it to someone else. In the end this can work out really badly for bloggers since our whole business revolves around our domain. Don’t give your host this power over you. Go through a seprate service to registar your domain.

  4. Yup, I am not into the companies holding the name unless it is a documented agreement. If you have issues with them or they get into trouble somehow they own that asset which may have been developed into a brand. That brand is yours yet it’s not.

    Be careful

  5. Wow, I knew not to get hosting and the domain name from the same place, just didn’t know this was the reason! I’m glad that even with my limited knowledge, I made sure to get my domain name from a different place.

  6. Kumiko says:

    Getting off blogger without losing traffic is really hard. My plan to get off it completely is going to take at least 3 months.

    Kumiko

  7. Kevin says:

    Katje – thanks for letting me know about bluehost. I had heard good things about them but i will not be promoting them here in any shape or form now that i know they do that. I despise companies that do this kind of thing.

  8. Katje says:

    Kevin – No problem. It was a mistake that I made, which is why I warn other people about it. It is better for people to learn from mistakes and warn other people about it than to let a problem continue. If enough people stop hosting with them for this reason may-be bluehost will change their policy about registering domains in their name.

  9. Jez says:

    I can but dream of a dedicated server, there are very few blogs that run them… on another note, you can install multiple wordpress instances onto a single database by changing the table prefix for each install…

  10. shypys says:

    I wonder if we can switch from free blogger to hosted wordpress with all the posts and template intact? Future planning haha…

  11. Michi says:

    I am looking for a real good free blog hoster, where i can use my own plugins and addons…

    Do you know someone good?

    Greets
    Michi

Trackbacks

  1. [...] The Basics of Hosting a Blog [...]

  2. [...] Hosting : The Basics of Hosting a Blog [...]

  3. [...] hosting. It important part of your start. Read this before. How Important Is Your Own Domain Name? The Basics of Hosting a Blog 6. Install one of popular blog-based CMS (content management system) like WordPress (and read this [...]

  4. [...] Thanks to blogging tips for some tips on wordpress hostsĀ  [...]

Comments are closed.

Comments are closed since this post is older than 30 days. However, you can continue this discussion in our popular Blogging Forums

Subscribe To BloggingTips Via RSS Subscribe To Blogging Tips Via Email Follow Us On Twitter Follow us on Facebook Find Out More About Our Newsletter

Sponsors

Blogging Tips Newsletter

Webmaster Corner

 

Our Free E-Books

Site Partners