Downtime guarantee and
service monitoring
Having a personal website go
down is a minor inconvenience; having a business website down is serious
business. How much profit do you lose if your site has been down for a week?
Long downtime can be very harmful for companies today who spend large amounts
of money on advertising their websites. Essentially, there are two rules about
the reliability that one should look:
1. You should check if there is
an uptime guarantee offered. A true service-oriented provider will also give a
money back guarantee, offering a discount or free service as compensation for
downtime. Any company that avoids taking the responsibility will not put much
effort in the service.
2. I certainly would not go with
a company claiming 100% uptime, as there is no such thing as a server with 100%
uptime. If anyone ever claims their server has a 100% uptime they are either
lying or they do not meet the necessary upgrades that prevent a machine from
being compromised.
Reputable web hosts will post
statistics on their site: What is the frequency of interruption? How about the
average percentage of downtime? If these are not posted, ask; if the answer is
not forthcoming, that should be a warning sign. If you always go with a host
which does not monitor servers, you'll have to do it yourself surveillance. I
recommend http://www.siteuptime.com because it is one of the best monitoring
services available for free on the market today.
Backups
There is no home is safe against
different types of technical and programical failures, so make sure the company
runs scheduled backups. The other tip is to always have a backup of your site
yourself, you never know what might happen. cPanel, a Web hosting software the
most popular of the management at this time, has a very comfortable decision
backup tool. It allows you to backup files and databases quickly and easily, so
backups are not a problem.
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