2. 2
What we will cover
What is shared Hosting?
Why use Shared Hosting?
What to look for
Things you should know
Hints on how to pick a provider
How to set up WordPress- 4 different methods
How to migrate a site
3. 3
What is Shared Hosting?
Many websites reside on a web server
connected to the Internet.Each site sits on its
own partition, or section, of the server to keep
it seperate from other sites.
This is generally the most economical option for
hosting , as many people share the overall cost
of server maintenance.
- Wikipedia
4. 4
Why Shared Hosting?
Cost Effective
The cost of servers, internet connectivity, maintenance and manpower is shared
over many customers.
The cost to run a server in a secure, redundant environment can easily run to tens
of thousands of dollars per month.
Run your business, not your technology
Shared Hosting allows you to focus on running your business, not learning how to
run a web server.
All told, it’s the simplest way to have a website, ideal for small businesses.
5. 5
What is required?
Minimum requirements for WordPress
Version 3.2 ( released July 4)
•PHP version 5.2.4 or greater
•MySQl version 5.0 or greater
6. 6
Things you should know
But providers don’t tell you
All that storage and bandwidth?...You’re never going to use it all.
Text is cheap ... but pictures and video will kill your storage
FTP Access...never needs to be capped
Email storage...shouldn’t be bundled up
MSAccess...is simply wrong. Don’t use it for your website. Ever. And I mean ever!!!!
7. 7
Things you should look for
From a hosting provider
Call support
How long did it take to talk to a live person?
Do they even have live support?
Call when you are most likely to be working on your site...calling at 10 am when
you are going to be working at 7pm will not give you an accurate idea
Ask to be transferred to the sales department
How was that experience?
Did sales know why you were transferred?
Don’t get locked in
Don’t commit for any more than 12 months maximum.
9. 9
One-Click Installer
What is it?
An application that installs software for the end user (WordPress, Joomla, Drupal
etc.)
Why Use it?
Simple to use
Fast
Why Not to use it
No control of what is installed
No control of how it is installed
Can be tough to go back and change the installation
13. 13
FTP
What is FTP?
Stands for File Transfer Protocol
Fancy way of saying “moving files from your computer to the server via the
internet”
What do you need?
FTP Client. There are many out there for Windows and Mac—some are even free
Why use FTP?
Fine control over what is installed
When you’ve uploaded your files, you get to use the famous 5-minute install for WP
Why NOT to use FTP
Can be slow depending upon your Internet connection
Requires greater technical knowledge than One-Click
Need to set up your own database for WP to work
24. 24
SSH
What is SSH?
Stands for Secure Shell
Fancy way of saying “A secure channel to connect to your web server space.”
Command line based ( Advanced users)
What do you need?
Command Line Tool-
PuTTY – Windows
Terminal - Mac
Why use SSH?
Much faster than FTP
Guarantees you always get the latest version of WordPress
Why NOT to use SSH?
Not all hosting providers offer full access (unable to connect to other sites)
Requires greater technical knowledge
Requires command line use
31. 31
Backup Buddy
What is Backup Buddy?
A WordPress plugin developed by ithemes ( www.ithemes.com)
Like getting 3 plugins in one
Installations
Backups
Migration tool
Why use Backup Buddy?
Allows you to develop locally, deploy to a web server
Takes all of your themes, custom CSS, plugins, content over in one smooth move
Why NOT to use Backup Buddy?
No custom installation of WordPress