This is not exactly a "top 10" líst, as all of the following things could easily be  listed as the most important consideration. Individuals, small companies and big  corporations all need to consider the same things when choosing a hosting package.
The overall "tip" here is that you need to get accurate information to make comparisons  among hosts. Therefore, each individual tip is another, separate aspect of the hosting  relationship that you need to investigate. You should take them all seriously.
  1. Traffic ("data transfer" or "bandwidth") - These  terms refer to the amount of information, measured in bytes, that is delivered from your website  to visitors. Although you will hear about "unlímited bandwidth", check to see if the same terminology  used for marketing purposes is reflected in the contract. In other words, read the contract before  signing on the dotted line. Unless you will be uploading photo archives or using your site to swap  large files, your small- to mid-size website should normally use no more than 3GB of bandwidth  monthly. Watch out for "overage" charges (per additional GB, usually) and consider upgrading your  account if the site traffic increases.
2. Disk space - Apply the same skeptical approach  to the "unlímited disk space" deals, as you did to the claims about traffic above. Again, the  majority of small to mid-size sites need 10-20MB of web space at most, so unless 500MB or  "unlímited space" is part of the basic package, don't bite. You can easily determine how much  storage you need by checking your file sizes and adding them up - all the HTML pages (which are  small) plus all the images (some of which can be big).
3. Uptime ("reliability") – The minimum figure for  uptime should be 99%. Today, in fact, that is the minimum advertised amount, as 99.5% or more is  referred to all the time. Many people would consider this the most important consideration.
 4. Tools and security (FTP, PHP, SSI, etc.) – Some  hosts require getting prior approval to install various scripts like CGI or PHP. You would be  less constrained with a host that does not make you wait for approval. To properly maintain  databases, set up security measures and otherwise customize your site, you need the full tool  set. Once you find out what you get in the way of tools, press a bit further and find out about  restrictions on their use, if any.
 5. Email – What's the use of having a custom-named  domain for your business if you continue using Hotmail or other web-based mail applications? Every  hosting plan will include e-mail services, allowing you to look and sound like a "real company" with  its own e-mail addresses. The quality of such add-ons as auto-responders, mail filters and mailing  managers will vary among potential hosts. Don't forget to verify that you will also have  "webmail" (web-based access to your mail server) and make sure to evaluate the anti-spam tools  that are available. 
  6. Technical support – As things often break down  at the worst possible times, you want tech support available as much as possible. Sometimes  "24/7 support" is more like "12/5 support", so find out about coverage on weekends and holidays.  It is also important to speak with a human being rather than be stuck in a circle of FAQ pages  and e-mail service requests. If you face an emergency that threatens your business, you also  want to know that the tech staff is knowledgeable. Ask about their training.
7. Remote controls – It may be called your  "control panel", it may be called a "tool kit", but every host will give you utilities with  which to manage your account. Often, there is a certain web page established from which to  do this. Managing your e-mail, mail accounts, passwords and anti-spam tools are all basic  chores for webmasters. With a powerful set of tools, the important control over your business  stays in your hands.
 8. Server architecture – There are numerous  reasons for choosing one type of server over another. If you want to use the ASP web  programming language, for example, it is only available on Windows servers. However,  cost-wise, it is often better to use a Unix system running Apache server software, which  is stable, dependable and lets you manage error pages, block specified IP addresses, stop  email harvesting and more, without waiting for your host to approve anything. Also, if  yours will be an e-commerce site, you will want to get SSL (Secure Socket Layer), MySQL  and shopping cart functionality.
9. Costs and payment plans – Price, quite  obviously, is an important factor, but the most expensive hosts are not always the best  ones. Consider cost, of course, and beware of dramatic price differentials on what are  really quite similar plans. You can pay via annual or quarterly payment plans that will  discount the monthly rate, and the more you pay at once (and upfront), the less you will  pay per month.
10. Reputation and reviews – Search the  Internet and talk to all of your business colleagues. Track down both complaints and  praises about your potential hosts, but remember to consider the source of the comments.
You will save yourself a lot of frustration if you do your homework. If you are unclear  or uncertain about any of the particulars, ask someone you know who has more expertise  for assistance. You can also take the bull by the horns and use the Internet as your  school, to learn what you need to know about hosting companies and how they work.
                                                                                                                                                                                                -searchspiderz
  
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