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Testing
Web Hosting Companies
by Daniel Lemnaru
In the final stage of your search
for a good web hosting company, a very important step is
to test "the finalists". Because most web hosting companies
have client support email(s) listed openly on their website,
testing the quality and speed of their support is quite
easy. All you have to do is send an email with one or more
questions.
Let's take things step by
step. First you have to find that email address. Usually
you can find it in a "contact us" or "about us" section.
Different email addresses result in different test results.
What I mean by that is that you have to send an email to
the SUPPORT team to verify the level of support, NOT the
sales team.
There are different types
of hosting companies: some web hosting companies answer their
support emails a lot faster than they answer sales related
emails, while others do exactly the opposite. You find that
strange? Don't! It'a all a metter of fosus. Generally, good
companies focus on their current customers and they regard
(not without reason) support tickets as more important than
new sales. Sure, the sales department should be reasonably
good too, but, as a customer, it's reassuring to know that
you come first when time is short.
I'm not saying that you
shouldn't send emails to the sales teams. Certain questions
are to be sent to the sales department, but the department
that really should be tested (customer wise) is the support
department. The reason is that after you sign-up for the
service you will deal almost exclusively with the support
staff.
By sending a test email
web several things can be verified (and compared):
1. The amount of
time it takes to receive a response.
To get the most
of of the test (and be able to make a valid comparison between
different companies) you should take special care not to
favor any company.
To test the response time
accurately you have to ensure that all investigated companies
are send the emails at roughly the same hour (their time,
not your time). Today we have hosting companies with staff
in USA, UK, Australia, Hong Kong etc. Why not "exactly" at
the same time? Because this is not rocket science! Of
course, be as precise as you possibly can, but don't stress
yourself too much.
Another thing is to select
the right day in the week. As you might expect, in the weekend
the response time can be somewhat longer. But, to put it
short, I would send the e-mail Saturday night after midnight
(their time, remember?). This should be the ultimate test.
Time evaluation: Anything
under 6 hours can be considered a very good response in my
opinion.
2. The quality of
the response.
Answer quality
has many facets. One of them is the quality of the information.
Is the question answered precisely and correctly? Another
one is the quantity of information. Is the answer incomplete,
complete or provides all you ever wanted and a bit more?
Another is the clarity of
the answer. Is the answer easy to understand, explains the "tech" words
that you might not be familiar with or it sounds like gibberish?
Another is the structure
of the answer. Is it well structured, stating with A and
finishing with Z, or it's all a mess?
3. The personal
level of the conversation (and/or politeness)
There are different
approaches to this politeness issue. Some hosting companies
use the "Sir" formula and some web hosting companies use
the "you" formula (I don't thing there are many using the "Ya" word)
. It's all a matter of taste. There are web hosting companies
employing the "friendly above all" approach and companies
employing the "respectful above all" approach.
As I said, it's a matter
of taste. I usually prefer the friendly approach because
it allows a "personal touch" and a slightly more relaxed
conversation. But hey! Who am I to judge you! If you prefer
to be called "Sir" or "Ma'am", I am OK with that. Just tell
me when you send me an email which type of conversation you
prefer and I assure you I will do my best to respect your
likes (and dislikes).
I guess those are the things
we can test with a test email. Let's devise now such a test
email. This will be just a sample to give you a rough idea;
you're free to make-up your own test.
Note that because you're
not hosted by them yet, your question come from someone they
don't know and can't verify if it's a client or not. You
could be asked to provide some form of client identification
in order to receive an answer, but I doubt this will happen.
"Hi.
I have a small
problem. I intend to learn PHP. I just wrote a small script
and I saved it in a file that I uploaded it on the server.
Whenever I load it, instead of getting the expected result,
the page simply lists the code of the script. Is there something
I can do about it?
Thank you very
much.
Regards,
Your name"
Of course this test
is mainly for UNIX/Linux servers with PHP (the majority of
such servers are PHP enabled, but you should make sure about
it in each case).
OK... So what are we looking
for in the answer?
First of all, because the
script doesn't work and it simply gets listed, it's almost
obvious that the script file is not parsed by PHP. In 99%
of the cases this is due to the fact that the file extension
is not .php (e.g. "scriptfile.php"). Since in basic HTML
design the files are saved as .htm or .html files, new web
programmers save script files with one of those extensions
too. This is a common mistake.
You can set .htm and .html
files to be parsed by PHP too. They should explain this to
you, suggest that you either change the file extension to
.php or have .htm and .html files parsed by the server, and
of course, instruct you how to do it.
Also, a very good support
team would offer to do make the necessary changes provided
that you tell them what's the name of your account with them
(website name).
And... this is about it.
Simple huh?
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