How To Change Your Web Hosting Provider - Step-By-Step Guide

April 20, 2008 – 6:34 pm

Whether you are disgruntled with the level of service your provider, or you have discovered a provider that offers you better deal, or your online business has simply outgrown your present provider, any reason is as good as any for changing your provider. The only concern is how to switch your web site from a to another in the right way and no or as little as possible.
The very first step in changing providers is to find one that meets all your requirements. Although you should have some experience in finding one from your last search, let’s still review the main issues when choosing one. Take a good look at the and bandwidth your future plan will provide you. As you web site’s may grow in time, purchase a little more than you need and take a good look at the costs of the bandwidth for exceeding your . Also make sure that the new provider will offer you the same tools and installed software as your previous old one. Ask the if the software or in the offer are already installed and configured. It would be a to find out after you have completely migrated your web site that not everything is working properly just because the not all the software in the offer comes pre-installed and you should have requested its activation. All these are very important and ensure you don’t have to go through this whole procedure of changing real soon in the future.
Sign up for the new hosting plan. It obvious, but the thing you should look after is sign up for the new one while still having about two weeks until your old hosting plan expires. This will give you time to react if anything goes wrong during the of your web site and will smoothen the for your visitors or customers, your business enjoying as much as possible.
Update your of your web site - you do have backups don’t you? If not this is a very good place to start with. Best thing would be to have a of your web site burned onto a compact disk CD and store this CD into a safe location. Your backup will include the entire web site: files, images, directory structure, databases.
Upload your web site to the web servers of your new provider.
Now it is testing time. Most providers will offer you the possibility to preview your web site before it goes live. Use this feature to test if your web site looks good and its functionalities are all intact on your new web server.
Continue by configuring your existing e-mail accounts on the new web server. It would be a good idea to write down the new POP3 and SMTP you will be using soon.
If you haven’t changed your web site design with this move, it will be a good idea to put mark the web pages on your new web server just o differentiate from the old one. In this way you will be able to tell when your DNS information is updated, which is the next step of migrating your web site.
It’s time to change your name server. As anxious you might be to transfer, it would be a very good thing to announce your visitors and customers about the imminent change of providers you are making and to apologize for any possible inconveniences of downtime your web site might encounter. I don’t need to tell you how important this announcement is for the overall image of your web business.
Now you can announce your registrar to change your DNS information, or if you can change it yourself, go ahead and do it.
All you have to do now is wait for the DNS information to propagate across all the DNS servers. This entire process could take as much as 72 hours to complete, but it is possible to start seeing the first results after a couple of hours.
Final step would be to update the e-mail client you are using to match the new POP3 and SMTP settings.
You have successfully changed your provider. Good luck with the new one!
Calin Indre is editor at HostPinPin (http://www.hostpinpin.com
), a Cheap Directory. HostPinPin.com is a resource for webmasters and consumers looking to find a company. Providing articles, tips, reviews, compare plans, free guide, free hosting quote, glossary and more.
This article may be reprinted or published without the authors consent as long as the “About” and “weblinks” are kept intact.

Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Google
  • Furl
  • Technorati
  • YahooMyWeb
  • StumbleUpon

You must be logged in to post a comment.