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by stef25
4298 days ago
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I used to work for an agency that charged the client for hosting their site (sometimes 100s of EUR a month) and all the clients ran on the same Hostgator reseller account type thing which cost almost nothing. The client didn't care, they just paid us for not having to worry about it and not having the skills the buy the correct config, size etc. Surely every web dev should do this, unless the client already has a perfectly fine hosting package? Just never host client emails. |
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In my experience, small agencies (up to 20 people) usually cannot afford or justify giving substantial resources to web hosting. My agency is now fairly small (five people), and web hosting is so complex and fast-growing, that we decided not to deal with it. We found a good partner a few years ago and we refer some of our clients to them. Some of our clients do pay hosting to us, but it's more of an application hosting type of service (they rent apps from us and pay annually). We have our own dedicated server on which we only allow websites we've developed ourselves. This is a legacy thing: we've been doing that before and we're still billing some of our past clients for app hosting, but stopped selling any new web hosting.
If I was starting an agency from scratch today, I would steer away from web hosting and let the specialized partner handle that for my clients. There are simply too many things that could go wrong if a small agency does not have the necessary expertise. One wrong step and you can lose a six-figure client over a $10 domain. And since there are too many things to keep up with in your core business (web development), your time is better spent learning about your core business, not about the web hosting business.