The Effect of Traffic on Web Hosting

In web hosting terms, traffic is singularly defined as bandwidth. Bandwidth, by definition is the amount of data that flows between your web server and its users. It is measured as the total amount of data coming in or going out of your website. Therefore, considering the bandwidth offered is a crucial concern.

Every time someone accesses any page on your site, the visitor effectively downloads all the images and files that are contained on the page, thus consuming bandwidth. An image, for example, is a larger file than a text file so visitors accessing an “image heavy” site will consume the bandwidth quickly. If your website is text based, the bandwidth consumed is less. A complicating factor is that an attractive site carrying a lot of graphics may attract a greater number of hits than a text based site. Therefore, you must not only take into account the number of visitors to your site, but also the actual content on your website when considering bandwidth. This could approximately be calculated as the number of hits your website receives multiplied by the size of the pages on your website.

We hosting companies generally limit the bandwidth on a monthly basis and charge separately for the amount of bandwidth consumed in addition to the set amount. Although there are some plans that have unlimited bandwidth options, they are expensive.

For small and medium sized websites, the bandwidth offered by the most popular plans would be more than enough. A website needs excellent promotion for the first six months or so, depending on the domain, before bandwidth crops up as a contentious issue.

In considering bandwidth, you need to be realistic about the amount of traffic you expect to receive and the potential for growth. In choosing a web hosting provider, you should consider ones that offer a number of plans with different bandwidth sizes so there is the ability to upgrade easily without moving to a completely new web hosting company.

How to choose a Web Hosting Provider! Hostgator vs. Godaddy.

I just went through the process of choosing a web hosting provider. Or should I say Blog Hosting provider. I have been with Godaddy for years and was a happy customer. Then I started blogging using a Word Press blog. Things weren’t going smoothly with Godaddy. At times my blog pages were coming up blank and the load time was very slow. Then when I introduced Firepow to automate my blogging business it got even more complicated. As Firepow is optimized for Hostgator.

I quickly learned about cpanel hosting interface vs. Godaddy’s proprietary interface. The standard is cpanel which is an interface that one can learn to navigate fairly quickly. Plus, most training you will find online provides cpanel instruction. An easy to use hosting control panel is very important when you are creating blogs and websites. Hostgator, also provides the fantastico hosting interface which I haven’t tried yet.

Then there is sql database creation. Godaddy takes a different approach. One cannot just simply point to “localhost” for the location of the database with Godaddy. You need to jump through hoops to find the location. Hostgator provided excellent support and imported my sql database which was a great help in moving my blogs to their system.

It would require a rather long article to provide all the details of the differences between the 2 services. Plus, folks would need to familiarize themselves with terms like: cpanel hosting, web hosts,blog,email hosting, shared hosting, reseller hosting, domain hosting, dedicated servers, dedicated hosting,ftp hosting,domain name hosting,hosting php,ecommerce hosting etc.I would suggest familiarizing yourself with these terms to gain a better understanding of the web and blog hosting environments.

The quick and dirty based on my experience is that Godaddy is great for domain name registration and Hostgator is great for a reliable hosting company. Hostgator has hosting plans from $4.95 per month. It really is not as problem to domain host with one company and use a different company’s hosting server. Just simply point the DS nameservers to the location that your blog or website is hosted at. The hosting provider will provide you with detailed instructions as to how this works.

If you visit the site you will find a 20 percent off coupon among other deals. There are links to domain registration and web hosting plans. It is a great place to start for hosting services and will provided you cheap webhosting. Additionally, if you use Hostgator as your hosting service, I would pay for at least a year in advance which provides even more savings. Hostgator really is a great blog webhost. Additionally if you want to automate your blogging business stop over at and read the article on Firepow.

Contact me for a $30.00 savings.