Hosting

wykthorr

Free Member
May 26, 2009
160
21
Romania
Go with Hostgator. There support is really good.

I can't +1 Hostgator. I've got an account with them and so do some of our clients (for whom we manage and monitor the websites). They've lately started to have prolonged outages and for one of the accounts the nameservers seem to crash every once in a while for quite a few hours.
 
Upvote 0
I can't +1 Hostgator. I've got an account with them and so do some of our clients (for whom we manage and monitor the websites). They've lately started to have prolonged outages and for one of the accounts the nameservers seem to crash every once in a while for quite a few hours.

I never had an issue with hostgator. Earlier I was hosting Hostgator US and now with Hostgator India, as they have servers in India now. I am with them from last 3 years and never had an issue.
 
Upvote 0
A lot of US hosts have mentioned, which if you're a UK business planning to host predominately UK clients isn't a great idea... you'll get worse latency and the middle of the night in the US is the morning in the UK, so any scheduled maintenance can be at an inconvenient time.

As mentioned if you want to resell web hosting it's worth reading up and understanding what you're getting into, however many of our reseller clients are design firms, or host a few sites for friends, clients, colleagues and so forth to pay for their own hosting and make a bit of money. So it really depends on what you want it for.

We'd be happy to help. We've been hosting many UKBF members for years now, and our reseller hostingoffers everything you need to get started - which unlike most hosts includes a dedicated IP address and free SSL certificate, as well as WHM/cPanel, and an excellent one click installer.

Feel free to use UKBF25 for 25% of your hosting with us.

If you have any questions feel free to get in touch, the best way is through our website for a quick response.

Good luck,

Dan
 
Upvote 0

Latest Articles

Join UK Business Forums for free business advice