Have you tried paid advertising?
Type: Posts; User: ASP-Hosting.ca; Keyword(s):
Have you tried paid advertising?
Thanks Darrell :),
Very well said!
Peter
Nothing is free indeed :). Sometimes beer, but most of the time not :D
If your site is not critical, just get something cheap or free. But if your site makes money then get something reliable, even if it's more expensive.
Yes, be very careful with any offer that has the word UNLIMITED in it...
I wouldn't recommend company that offers "UNLIMITED" domains.
I wouldn't accept e-gold.
I wonder how stable is the ASP.NET 2.0 Beta? Have you had any problems with it so far?
Wonderful post. I'm amazed :p
Nothing wrong with that.
DirectAdmin is user-friendly, much faster than CPanel and less buggy :)
What's wrong with renting servers? I rent several dedicated servers and I don't think it does make any difference if you actually own the servers or you lease them.
Your site has PR 6 :)
If you are going with L:inux account, I recommend DirectAdmin control panel.
It really works, but it's getting harder for new hosts with sensible prices to gain customer share.
This is due to the Google PR update. My site http://www.asp-hosting.ca was showing the grey bar for a while, but now is back to where it was. PR is not that important anymore.
Most hosting companies offer anonymous DNS with the reseller plans and I don't think that anybody will ask you if you are reselling or not.
CPanel is available for Linux only...
These guys accept e-gold payments:
http://www.simplywebhosting.com/egold.shtml
I haven't heard of these companies, but give them a try and let us know if it worked for you. Good luck!
Start with a popular hosting affiliate program and see how well does it convert. If it is converting well, ask yourself, can I offfer the same features and service for the same price? If the answer...
The best Linux control panel in my opinion is DirectAdmin. It's much better than CPanel...
I think it's better to look for web hosting affiliate program, if you are not planning to support your customers...
compete on price = bad business plan
:)
This is simply not true.
|