GoDaddy Customer Review
I’m starting with GoDaddy since I’ve been with them the longest. I left AOL and created my first site in 2000. I went with another host first. They were reliable, but they didn’t provide me enough space, so I went with GoDaddy. I thought their first superbowl commercial was hilarious and decided to give them a try in 2005. Their monthly rate was very close to the $2.95 I had been paying for my previous host. I think paying by the year, it averaged about $3.29 a month. Godaddy offered a huge amount of space and bandwidth for that, and I got more email accounts than I would ever use as well.
The best thing I can say about this host is that I have NEVER noticed any downtime with them. I visit my site at least once a day, and it was always up. That is the most important aspect of a host for me, and everyone brags about 99.9% uptime. I can now tell you from experience that not all hosts are being truthful about that percentage, but Godaddy is.
The next thing that is almost as important as uptime is how economical they are. I have quite a few domains with free hosts, which are good for sites that you don’t maintain that much and have little traffic. I’m not made of money, and I make very little from my websites, so I can’t afford more than a few dollars a month in hosting. Godaddy was the cheapest out there in 2005. Not only cheap but reliable. I can’t stress how important those two aspects are, or how hard it is to find both those.
Now the few negatives, and the reasons I left godaddy in the spring of 2008 (which was also one of the biggest mistakes I’ve ever made online). You get 100 email accounts with hosting with a max of 100 MB total for those accounts. So you can either have 100 accounts with 1 MB email storage or 10 accounts with 10 MB storage, but there was no way to change that max of 10 MB per account. I didn’t like that at all, especially with all the free email accounts out there with 1 GB storage. I was paying for hosting and only getting 10 MB for my main email account? I ended up creating a yahoo account that I used more often for the storage. Well, goaddy has now fixed that issue, so we can put all 100 MB to one account if we want to. It’s still too low of an amount, but I can live with it.
I know enough about how the web works to get myself into trouble, but when I set up my first ftp account with godaddy, I had no idea that it would become part of my root path. So anytime there was an error on my forum, my ftp account name would be shown to all my users. I chose my own name when I created it and didn’t like that aspect at all. I emailed godaddy, since I couldn’t change the username in my control panel. They responded that it was impossible to change it. I told them that I might have to leave them if I couldn’t, which I did end up doing. This was probably the main reason I left and it would still bother me that I couldn’t change it. I’m now back with them and was able to create a new username that was more suitable. I don’t know if they still don’t allow you to change your ftp account, but that’s a moot point for me now.
Lastly, I had been doing a cron job for backing up my forum database. Godaddy did some upgrade of their software, and it conflicted with my jobs. It would no longer run, so I complained to support. They blamed me for it somehow and didn’t seem willing to fix the problem. I researched and everything pointed toward Godaddy not upgrading properly, but I couldn’t convince them of this. Well, it turns out that all my subsequent hosts have one problem or another with doing cron job backups, so it was pointless to leave one host for another for this reason. I don’t even do the cron jobs anymore, since it wasn’t worth the frustration. And what good are they if you don’t download them frequently, and your current host suspends you for no good reason? Of course, that is why I have returned to godaddy, but that’s a different review.
Unfortunately, since I left godaddy last year, I lost the special price I was getting. They are a bit more now, but paying for 2 years brings the average price down to $4.50 a month (they get cheaper the more years you pay for at once). $4.50 a month is still lower than most of the hosts out there, and I know I can rely on godaddy for uptime. Again, uptime and price are the most important to me. Yes, they have their faults, but believe me when I tell you, NO host is perfect. You just have to weed through the unprofessional and/or bad ones to find the best choice. Oh, and the third most important thing about a host is that you can trust them. Reliability is very important. You want to know that your account is safe with these people. That they won’t suspend without good reason or treat you like you don’t matter. We are the customers after all. They wouldn’t be needed if not for us, but a few hosts seem to forget that fact. So far godaddy has proven they can be trusted.
Source: WHT - written by Judedl
Related posts:
- GoDaddy Review Go Daddy has been around since 1997 and continues...
- 2010 Godaddy Coupon Codes [caption id="attachment_1122" align="alignleft" width="220" caption="Godaddy Coupon Codes"][/caption] YES3 - 30%...
- HostGator Customer Review by J Dub I have been with HostGator for about a year and...
- HostGator Customer Review by Flash We’re newbies out in the website world and came to...
- GoDaddy Coupon Code GoDaddy Coupon: “199DOMAIN“ I was just registering a new domain...
Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

























{ 0 comments… add one now }