ML
    • Recent
    • Categories
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Register
    • Login

    Starting a Shared Web Hosting Company

    IT Discussion
    16
    38
    15.2k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • A
      Alex Sage
      last edited by Alex Sage

      Maybe I can host grovesocial.com for @Danielle-Ralston .....

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Deleted74295D
        Deleted74295 Banned
        last edited by

        https://www.tsohost.com/

        These guys have fantastic support.
        The pricing is brilliant.
        Their team is big enough to deliver, small enough to care https://www.tsohost.com/about/meet-the-team

        Can you beat all 3 of the above?

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • stacksofplatesS
          stacksofplates
          last edited by

          This is going to be more than difficult. Even at $5 a month per site, that's only $100 a month with 20 sites. Is that even enough to cover your costs for this?

          Are you just hosting Wordpress sites or are you saying your main advertisement site will be Wordpress?

          Also unless you automate account creation, you are going to have to manually set up folders for each site.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • J
            Jason Banned
            last edited by

            Just don't. You can't beat prices and make any money you need large scale setups/data centers to make money with it. And offering multiple things in that DC to make it more cost efffective.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller
              last edited by

              It's true that there are many with bad customer service, but there are also many with good customer service. One of the problems, in general, is that low cost and great customer service cannot go together reasonably. The cost of customer service can easily become more expensive than the company pays.

              Say you do normal pricing which is, at most, $5/mo (that's actually mid range pricing but it is decently low) which comes out to $60/year.

              That $60/year has to cover your cost of collections (covering credit card fees and such) and all of the issues with people who don't pay (do you just cut them off, no warning... is that good customer service, do you bill them months in advance, do you give them free service for a while until they decide to pay... none of these things are free and all are very common issues) and if the customer has a single issue in a year it can easily cost more than $60 to support that one ticket.

              So even if your entire hosting infrastructure is free, just the backend management stuff could end up costing you more than the customer is worth. It is a very tough business.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller
                last edited by

                We were a web host going back to the 1990s. Back when there weren't the low cost hosts out there everywhere. It kind of made sense then. We phased it out over a decade ago, it was just not a viable business model until you have tens of thousands of clients and even then, very hard to do.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller
                  last edited by

                  One of the difficult things is that to have good pricing you need to run on your own hardware. But to have scalability you'd want cloud. That makes things very hard.

                  Likely your only reasonable option would be to start with dedicated hardware and project as best as possible when to buy and just stop taking on new customers if you grow too fast until new gear arrives.

                  Something like Dell R730xd with some SSDs for the MariaDB server VMs and then SATA disks for your application VMs would work well and be cost effective.

                  Something like the Scale HC2100 and HC2150 hybrid tiered cluster would do the same and allow you to grow from three nodes to a dozen or more with high availability built in and growth built in giving you an HA infrastructure plus a growth system. Otherwise growing past one node is going to be very, very painful as you move from local storage to a CEPH cluster or whatever.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • J
                    Jason Banned
                    last edited by

                    A HyperConvereged system (compute and storage in one). So you can just add another node a scale out both storage and compute power you just add another node.

                    However this is not cheap, a single node with a few TB can easily cost as much as house.

                    scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller @Jason
                      last edited by

                      @Jason said:

                      A HyperConvereged system (compute and storage in one). So you can just add another node a scale out both storage and compute power you just add another node.

                      However this is not cheap, a single node with a few TB can easily cost as much as house.

                      A very cheap house 🙂 I know that an entry level Scale system starts at roughly ~$25K in the US. That would be a full three node HA cluster with all of the storage and compute included. So while it is far more than just buying a single server and figuring out scaling later, it gets you into the HA world and the scale out world all in a single purchase and let's you host quite a lot of web before needing to invest more. And it would be under $300/mo to host in a Tier IV datacenter.

                      Scaling to more capacity would be done in chunks of like $8500 or so. So you can grow as you bring in customers.

                      J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • DashrenderD
                        Dashrender
                        last edited by

                        How does bandwidth work in those solutions? I hear Scott saying that he gets 100 Mb connections in those colo's but I'm assuming that it's just one per server. Not sure if a Scale cluster would be considered 1 or 3 (assuming 3 servers?) But really that's not relevant - what's relevant is what you are providing to your customers on that cluster.

                        I have no clue, so I'm putting this out there as a question.

                        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                          last edited by

                          @Dashrender said:

                          How does bandwidth work in those solutions? I hear Scott saying that he gets 100 Mb connections in those colo's but I'm assuming that it's just one per server. Not sure if a Scale cluster would be considered 1 or 3 (assuming 3 servers?) But really that's not relevant - what's relevant is what you are providing to your customers on that cluster.

                          Depends if you are buying by the rack (this would be a quarter rack probably) or by the "U". If you buy by the U, you get one connection from each node. If you buy by the rack, you get one connection to your rack.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            You could easily negotiate a quarter rack with three node, two switches (that's 5U) and a GigE drop with metered bandwidth.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • J
                              Jason Banned @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by Jason

                              @scottalanmiller said:

                              @Jason said:

                              A HyperConvereged system (compute and storage in one). So you can just add another node a scale out both storage and compute power you just add another node.

                              However this is not cheap, a single node with a few TB can easily cost as much as house.

                              A very cheap house 🙂 I know that an entry level Scale system starts at roughly ~$25K in the US. That would be a full three node HA cluster with all of the storage and compute included. So while it is far more than just buying a single server and figuring out scaling later, it gets you into the HA world and the scale out world all in a single purchase and let's you host quite a lot of web before needing to invest more. And it would be under $300/mo to host in a Tier IV datacenter.

                              Scaling to more capacity would be done in chunks of like $8500 or so. So you can grow as you bring in customers.

                              Most be pretty low end, VBlock starts around $180,000 for entry level. though for true shared webhost only you don't need much the fanciest.

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller @Jason
                                last edited by

                                @Jason said:

                                @scottalanmiller said:

                                @Jason said:

                                A HyperConvereged system (compute and storage in one). So you can just add another node a scale out both storage and compute power you just add another node.

                                However this is not cheap, a single node with a few TB can easily cost as much as house.

                                A very cheap house 🙂 I know that an entry level Scale system starts at roughly ~$25K in the US. That would be a full three node HA cluster with all of the storage and compute included. So while it is far more than just buying a single server and figuring out scaling later, it gets you into the HA world and the scale out world all in a single purchase and let's you host quite a lot of web before needing to invest more. And it would be under $300/mo to host in a Tier IV datacenter.

                                Scaling to more capacity would be done in chunks of like $8500 or so. So you can grow as you bring in customers.

                                Most be pretty low end, VBlock starts around $180,000 for entry level. though for true shared webhost only you don't need much the fanciest.

                                VBlock is crazy stuff, doesn't have any low end offerings. Most hyperconverged starts at a fraction of that price. VBlock is, AFAIK, the most expensive offering on the market, not "normal" by any stretch. And only comes in very large sizes.

                                Other hyperconverged players like Scale, Starwind, Nutanix, Simplivity start around the same range as each other.

                                VBlock makes their money off of people buying the name, you pay a massive VMware tax on that gear. Not that that is bad, they have great technology, but like Cisco, you pay a ton of overhead just for the name.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • stacksofplatesS
                                  stacksofplates
                                  last edited by

                                  Why delete this? If you have the ability to do it, more power to you. It's also a good reference for people who might be wanting to do the same thing.

                                  A 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • A
                                    Alex Sage @stacksofplates
                                    last edited by

                                    @johnhooks I didn't delete it.....

                                    RojoLocoR scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • RojoLocoR
                                      RojoLoco @Alex Sage
                                      last edited by

                                      @aaronstuder said:

                                      @johnhooks I didn't delete it.....

                                      Somebody did, and then you put it back up. When most of us were reading this, OP was deleted.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @Alex Sage
                                        last edited by

                                        @aaronstuder said:

                                        @johnhooks I didn't delete it.....

                                        What it back?

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • scottalanmillerS
                                          scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          No idea why the OP was deleted. But it is not purged, or was not last that I checked. That means that it can be recovered.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller
                                            last edited by

                                            OH I see, it is ACTUALLY back already. Weird.

                                            travisdh1T 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • 1
                                            • 2
                                            • 1 / 2
                                            • First post
                                              Last post