Best Way to Start a Website Hosting Service? 164
Kwirl writes "Lets say that I wanted to start a small business endeavor, namely reselling my server space and offering pre-built websites. What resources would I need to start something like this on my own? What hosting service would best suit those needs? What would be the best way to manage a subdomain-level service that provided a basic forum, registration, a web site and some controlled administrative access for my friends so they couldn't easily terrorize each other? I'm curious to know if I could start something like this on my own, and without much more than just my own server space, time, and creativity. I'm not looking to make a living out of this, its mostly just a way for me to more efficiently manage having several friends each wanting me to built or run a web site for them, and perhaps make some small residual income if a market exists. The Slashdot community represents such a broad swath of experience and expertise that I'd like to know how you would approach a project of this nature."
Re:Plesk (Score:5, Interesting)
It might simplify SOME things, but it sure as hell makes other things more difficult.
Here's what I do (Score:4, Interesting)
If I make one webpage for a few hundred dollars, it pays my hosting for the year. Until I use 1/2 my resources, I have no need to upgrade so far.
Re:CPanel (Score:3, Interesting)
I've never seen a wep application with such a horribly contorted, uncomfortable, unwieldy and annoying interface. It's an abomination thrown in the face of UI and usability desingers and knowledgeable admins forced to use it to manage shared hosting accounts under their administration. It lacks any kind of consistency and logic and even encourages making the things worse by not enfocing any of those on the plugins written by the companies that use this bastard child of an administration panel.
Save a few poor people their grief and don't use cPanel,
Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Plesk (Score:3, Interesting)
Hosting as a bonus (Score:3, Interesting)
I have used both Plesk and Cpanel, they both suck, but they also serve their purpose.
Reseller packages (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, they might be expensive and yes you might not have total control over many things but you:
1) don't have the hassle for security and uptime (if it goes down you complain to the host).
2) many reseller packages have software that automate billing and registration.
3) are usually "unlimited" so you can host many sites for your friends at little to no cost (depending on volume of sites registered.
I do it and I find it to be a pretty good way of hosting for friends and family for less than $50 a month.
GoDaddy Premium Hosting Account (Score:4, Interesting)
Depending on how many friends, charge them $3 to $5 per month...
Did this for myself last year, to give myself a big web sandbox to play around in...
Money well spent...
Disclosure: No, I don't own GoDaddy, but I am a satisfied customer.
DONT start a hosting service unless (Score:3, Interesting)
by going local you can still do good business. many people need reliable and cheap all in one bundles of web design, domain registration and hosting.
get a linux box, apache, php, mysql, get cPanel on top of it. that is the most widespread used setup. when we take on a new customer its very high chance that they already know how to use a cPanel site control panel. DONT ever think of getting plesk, it has a very shitty and confusing user interface.
Re:Plesk (Score:3, Interesting)
Being a web developer, I pay more just to have the privilege to get a phone number.Most of these big hosting companies provide very poor technical support. If you label yourself as a hosting company, with personalized contact (name, phone number, email address, etc.) I'm your client.
Something else:Most of these responses are from losers and fools (Score:5, Interesting)
I will say I am 75 years old, never took a course in any computer program, use Frontpage (oh the humanity! - but it does the job) most of the time, Photoshop, a good text editor (I like Alleycode) plus some Joomla, WordPress and a very good little shopping cart. I seek out and intently use various forums. I have one modest sized dedicated managed server based at a resource that gives great tech support, and another shared server account (likewise). I charge $240 per year prepaid (refund of unused portion anytime) and reasonable prices for site building.
I have clients in 7 countries. I'm not getting rich but it sure beats Social Security. I have a very satisfying retention rate; some clients are with me now for more than ten years.
How do I do this in the face of all the negatives, real and imagined above?
I give very serious personal service. My home phone is on my business cards.
I regularly study and monitor every client's web sites (some have as many as five sites) very carefully and am proactive in alerting them to issues that affect performance and value. I watch their traffic and the email flow and take action when I see a problem.
I deal only with the owner of the business or the top executive of the organization (I have a number of NGOs, some of them famous).
I avoid making presentations to potential clients whom I recognize early on as people who know the price of everything but the value of nothing. You can tell who they are because they only want to know the price, not discuss what their needs are or how my services will fulfill them. Let the discounters have them.
Based on years of experience, I never accept creative people of any kind as clients. That means, no writers, painters, performers, photographers, etc. - they are unteachable and surprisingly close-minded. Give me an inquiring, curious and engaqed business person any day.
When I screw up, I make sincere amends that build trust and loyalty. For example, when I failed to prevent an unintended domain expiration, I worked hard at recovery, got back the name for my client and gave him a free year of registration and hosting. He's been with me now for 6 years.
I never speak with anyone without giving them a business card. During a visit to any store or business or any casual encounter, I hand out a card. I give a free year of hosting to any existing client who sends me a new client.
In other words, bottom line, I work at getting customers and I work even harder at keeping them.
Re:Most of these responses are from losers and foo (Score:3, Interesting)
I looked at switching about a year ago, and gave them some of the quotes I found. They came back with a slightly higher one than the ones I'd found, but which I accepted because I knew that my problems quickly became their problems and had no such information about their competitors. I'm happy to pay a premium for
Some more concrete advice:
Re:How to succeed in 10 easy steps (Score:3, Interesting)
I think maybe I didn't ask the right question (Score:3, Interesting)
My apologies, let me attempt to restate my question.
Let's say I get www.myname.com. That site then becomes a basic directory of sites and games within a given genre. One of the sites that I list then comes to me and says, I would like to sign up and use customer1.myname.com as my site.
If i wanted to give them a basic index page with a subdirectory, provide a forum, photo gallery, their own updatable news/info page, etc.
I'm not talking so much about web hosting as pre-built packages to allow them their own site within my existing one.
It can be done, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
I have done this for about 10 years now, and the *only* reasons I got into it and stayed with it are;
1) I was already doing websites for friends and a couple of clients. I had already had a job being responsible for maintaining someone else's servers. ie there was not a huge learning curve.
2) The company I worked for made the decision to change hardware and software platforms, and sold me their existing gear for pennies. ie no big upfront costs.
3) I now work for a telephone company and can get a circuit to my home for a very reasonable rate. ie low ongoing costs.
In conclusion, unless you have experience, the resources to put together a small server farm, and your ongoing costs can be easily covered (even if some clients leave you), don't do it yourself.