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Webmaster Articles -
Web Hosting
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Written by Danny Collins
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When deciding on an affiliate product to promote, you just can't go wrong with a web hosting affiliate program. More and more people are building web sites with every passing day, and there is one thing they all need - web hosting. Of course, many will opt for the free options, but they learn their lessons soon enough - and every time that happens, it means a new web hosting company in the world.
Not only that, but you would be surprised at how many people are unhappy with their current hosting. It was not very long ago that I was doing sales for a hosting company, and 90% of my customers were people who were unhappy with their existing service. I didn't seek these people out, but they came nonetheless.
Not only that, but the recurring nature of web hosting makes it very profitable. Therefore, hosting companies can offer respectable payouts for new customers. If you don't believe me, take a look at what the top web hosting companies are paying for Adsense terms. It's astronomical!
The trick is to find a good web hosting affiliate program. There are a few ways you can go about it:
- Check with your own hosting company. Ask your sales rep if they offer an affiliate program of any sort. If you don’t yet have hosting, then consider signing up for some affiliate programs first, as some companies will let you sign up under your own affiliate account, thereby giving you some of your money back. The Planet is an example of a company that allows this.
- Adwords. Search Google for hosting-related terms and see what comes up in the Adwords on the right. As these companies are purchasing traffic, there's a good chance they may also run independent affiliate programs.
- Affiliate Networks. Many web hosting affiliate programs run through large affiliate networks, such as ShareaSale.com and CJ.com. All you have to do is sign up for the affiliate network, search for "web hosting" or something similar, and parse through the results.
- Find reseller programs. This is a different route altogether, but instead of signing up for an affiliate program, you might want to sign up for a reseller hosting account. Many affiliate programs offer reseller programs, in which you would create the front end and sales page, and the automation takes most of it from there.
If you're going to market your pages using SEO tactics, I do highly recommend finding some good long tail keyword combos to go after - promoting web hosting is profitable when you have the traffic, but it’s also very highly competitive. Without some good long tail keywords, you'll have a very hard time ever breaking through to the first page of Google. |
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Webmaster Articles -
Web Hosting
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Written by Danny Collins
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One thing that tends to confound many people when purchasing web hosting is the difference between Linux hosting and other platforms such as Windows. Linux hosting is currently the most popular operating system among web hosts, for a variety of reasons. In most cases, if you're unsure which OS would be best, choose Linux.
Adding to the confusion is the fact that Linux comes in many flavors: Red Hat, CentOS, Fedora, Ubuntu, SuSE, Debian, and more. The truth is that, for most people, any of these distributions will do just fine, and all but Red Hat are free.
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Webmaster Articles -
Web Hosting
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Written by Danny Collins
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The term "multi-homed" is used commonly by bandwidth providers as a sales pitch to attract your business. Do you know what this means? If a provider claims to be multi-homed, are they truly multi-homed?
Multi-homed is used to refer to the practice of hooking one network to the Internet at more than two places, giving the network multiple paths to the Internet and providing speedier connections around the world as well as giving their network a better level of redundancy in case of network issues or fiber cuts.
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Webmaster Articles -
Web Hosting
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Written by Jeff Dunn
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Many webmasters pick their hosts based on the price alone. And even if that is not the sole decision-making point, bandwidth rates are almost always a consideration. It is often the experience of a webmaster to get into a contract or open an account with a provider that appears to be the lowest priced only to find another provider at half the cost 6 months later.
So, what are webmasters supposed to do? First, it is important to explain what effects hosting prices. With most hosting providers, they are usually buying their bandwidth from a high-end fiber carrier. These carriers provide large amounts of bandwidth at low prices. The hosting provider purchases the bandwidth and then attaches their servers to that bandwidth. When a webmaster opens an account with a hosting provider, they are often not actually buying bandwidth from that provider. They are buying a hosting service that uses another carrier's bandwidth. The hosting provider will mark up the cost they are paying to the carrier, add some costs for labor and equipment, and then you have your hosting rate.
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