The right hosting, is not necessarily the most expensive, and it certainly isn’t the cheapest.
When I first started building a site using Drupal, I was using a private site I had set up on my HostGator account, but I kept seeing people saying that you can’t use a certain company’s shared hosting for a Drupal site. I would also see people saying that it could be done without much trouble, so I decided to launch the site using that particular company’s shared hosting.
It was quite the learning curve, I piecemealed advice and instructions from wherever I could find it. Usually I would try something, which resulted in a new problem. The new problems were almost always related to how that company’s hosting is set up. In fact, these problems almost always appeared to be unique to Drupal installations on accounts with that company.
Working through these problems, while being extremely frustrating, they always showed me new things about how Drupal works, and also gave me a taste of PHP programing. This kept me going and is why I stayed with it, instead of switching back to my HostGator account.
I ran my site for a few months on that account, and it seemed like I had gotten over all of the limitations of that hosting. Then I began to notice that the organic traffic to my site was growing, which was incredible since as a site built to show that I could build a site using Drupal, I had filled the site with reprinted articles.
Suddenly, I decided to invest some time in my site, and print some original content. I talked to my friend, Bette and she agreed to write some new material for me. I also made some major changes to the site to give it more of an appealing layout, inspired in part by some comments MiMi had made to me.
Starting with Bette’s first article a couple of weeks ago, the site began to experience major problems. “500 Internal Error” was the most common, and I could only attribute it to the hosting account not being able to handle the sudden influx of traffic. In fact, when the first article was published, it marked the most people to visit my site for a single article on the same day.
That was when I finally gave up on the host I was using, and moved the site back to my Hostgator account. I had four domains hosted there under my main domain using their “Addon Domains” feature, and have plenty of room to add more. I didn’t need to change my hosing package at all to be able to move my site over, I was even able to get it all done on a Sunday.
Just in time, too!
Bette’s second article, Single Parents Getting Back on the Career Path, actually received close to 100 visits the day after I published it. A traffic quirk, to be sure, but my site had absolutely no problems from this new traffic load.
If I expect to do work for other people, I’ll need to be able to use different hosting companies, but for my own sites, I’ll stick with HostGator.

