Also known as "Terms and Acceptable Usage Policy" your
Service Level Agreement, SLA is probably the most important piece of
text you will need to read. And read you will have to; the entire
text. Once you have familiarized yourself with this SLA you can
start to skim read and look out for the most important details you
feel are most important to you as you search for other hosting
companies.
An SLA basically tells you what services you will be paying for
and what rights you do not have and what rights you do have. You are
agreeing to pay for your web hosting and for what is in the SLA and
nothing else. In this document or text, the web host provider is
letting you know in print, what you will have to agree to if you
wish their services. But remember, that it also tells you, what
rights you have. If the web host provider does not live up to the
SLA, you now have a right to use this agreement to your advantage.
Web sites and web pages are very powerful marketing tools to
appeal and encourage the client to act or buy the service that
company is offering. Web pages can contain images, Flash, colors and
even sounds and music. A web page can even be interpreted as one big
advertisement to the buyer. This is why the SLA of a company, or in
this case, a web host provider is so important. It is straight to
the point and to quite a number of people, simply boring. Many times
the SLA is written in small text, is very long and to some people
confusing or complicated. You may notice some SLA's are almost
hidden or at the bottom of a page in small text or only available on
the order form.
Is there a reason why this is so? To have your SLA on the first
page would look very odd and highly unusual. There are many reasons
why some companies choose to have their SLA located where they are,
written the way they are. Some are simply so they do not confuse the
buyer. Some are so they do not scare the buyer so he or she thinks
that what they are "getting into", is way out of their
league. Unfortunately, some companies "hide" these service
agreements because it reveals too much about the company and what
you are really purchasing. Remember the colorful and bedazzling web
pages? Well these SLA's are just the opposite. They get straight to
the point. It's like opening the hood of a car and looking at the
engine to see exactly how it works.
If you do not find an SLA anywhere on the website and have looked
on just about all the web pages, then simply move on to another
provider. This must be present on all web host providers selling
services, even if they are free. You can always ask for their SLA,
but this is not advisable if it comes in the form of an email as
there is no way for both parties to revert to a static SLA.
This is also another important matter. The web host provider can
always change their SLA if need be, but find out if you are told so
and how much time you have to adapt to these changes. It is not good
agreeing to their terms and then having them change it later on to
something you did not agree to. You may wish to make a copy of their
SLA page and save it on to your computer's hard disk. You may also
find it much easier to read their SLA by copying and pasting the
text into Notepad and reading it from there. There is actually no
need to read the small print on the web page itself, just copy and
paste.
Another "tactic" for some web host providers is to
provide their SLA on the order form. This is where you are just
about to enter your credit card details and pay for your web hosting
that they inform you of their SLA. A check mark is needed beside the
agreement which usually has a link to the small text. 9 times out of
10, buyers can't be bothered to read this long complicated text and
just get on with getting their web hosting. A mistake done all too
often. Roughly 70% of all customers read their SLA after they have
purchased a web hosting account.
Let's discuss what the SLA can contain. You can always
"verify" if what the web pages say are true, as well as
get the finer details in the SLA. For a while, a few years back, the
most heated discussions involved unlimited bandwidth and web space.
To cut a long story short, unlimited bandwidth or web space is
simply and always will be an outright lie. There is no such thing;
again, read the SLA.
30 day money back guarantee.
The phrase sounds simple enough but there are still just a few
things to think about. Can you receive a refund on the 30th day? Or
do you need to give them 7 days
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warning that you wish for a refund.
Is is truly a "30 day guarantee"? Does it regard all types
of payments, check, money order credit card etc. Is it mentioned in
the SLA? Remember, you are basically buying the services within the
SLA.
Uptime guarantee.
Another very important feature to look closer at. Again, web
pages can look wonderful, but the business takes place within the
text of the SLA. You may even want to compare how these uptime
guarantees are calculated by other web host providers. Do you need
proof to in order to tell the web host provider that your site was
down more than x many hours a month so the web host provider can
give you a refund? Or is it more complicated, where your site needs
to be down for x many hours in a row? In other words, down 2 hours
on Monday, 3 on Tuesday, and 1 hour on Sunday but not 6 hours in a
row, therefore not receiving a refund? Or if their uptime guarantee
does not involve third party software crashes, server maintenance,
internet congestion etc. What does the uptime guarantee cover? Not,
what does the uptime guarantee not cover. It is extremely unlikely
for any web host provider to offer a 100% uptime guarantee, without
some exceptions.
What files are permitted?
There are more than just .html, .gif and .jpg files on the
Internet. Apart from those files, what other files are you allowed
to upload? Do they include any multimedia files; mp3 or movie files?
Are you allowed to upload software files? and etc.
How is the bandwidth and disk space quota handled?
If you go over your quota, how is it handled. Are you
automatically charged the extra fee? And if so, how much? Or, is
your account suspended until you pay the extra charges or pay for
the next hosting account? Or, are you notified about the
"problem" and asked to pay the extra charges or upgrade to
the next hosting plan within a certain number of days?
Domain names.
If you have registered a domain name with a registrar you should
not encounter any problems. If you are registering a domain name
through your web host provider, make sure you retain all rights to
the domain name. This is especially true if you are given a free or
a very inexpensive domain name with your account. Some web host
providers will register the domain name for you, but in their name,
which means you do not own it. In some cases, if you wish to move to
another web host provider you will have to purchase the domain from
them at a much higher cost.
Miscellaneous categories.
A few other categories to study are server resources, background
running programs, mass mailing and other technical areas like Cron
Jobs, telnet or SSH etc. Some of these topics mentioned in the SLA
may sound rather strict or stringent but it is actually very common
to read these same restrictions on almost all web host providers.
This is, as mentioned earlier, to inform you of your rights and most
importantly in this case, to protect the customer from harming or
congesting the server for the company's other clients. You do not
want someone slowing down the server which you are using so your web
pages load slowly or not at all. So you can actually be more
reassured that if this happens, action will be taken, thus an
advantage to you and not necessarily a hindrance. (This mainly
refers to all virtual hosting accounts.)
If you are uncertain about a certain part of an SLA, you should
always ask the web host provider. Never assume something is adequate
unless you are sure and have checked. Always think ahead. Will I
need this or that in the future? What happens if my website grows
much bigger? What if I need to upload x type of files from now on?
What if the third party company or software I work with needs this
or that enabled? Should I have read the whole SLA? Never assume your
web host provider will have or offer what you wish.
Find out, and if you are not sure, ask!
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