Review of Westhost Hosting for Wordpress Sites

March 15, 2009

in Recommended Resources

Westhost plus Wordpress has been a winning combination

Westhost plus Wordpress has been a winning combination

What’s the best hosting service for my Wordpress site?

I get asked this question at least once a week. Best is a relative term dependent upon a lot of factors. Ask folks about the “best hot fudge sundae” and you would expect it to be one made with rich, dark fudge — unless you ask my friend Mary. Mary hates dark chocolate, preferring sweeter, milder chocolate. So my “best” is her “worst.”

Frankly, I recommend very few hosting services and nothing I haven’t personally used. Now I can comfortably and confidently recommend Westhost, especially for Wordpress-based sites. So let me review my experience with Westhost and not 1, not 2, not 3 but 12(!) Wordpress installations.

I’ve been very happy with my current hosting service  for several years now, however… recently I started having some problems with my Wordpress installations and permissions conflicts. In particular, I ran into the dreaded “image upload” problem and I haven’t been able to use the automatic updating features of various plugins and the new Wordpress 2.7. Permissions problems like I was having usually result from the server set up. And to make matters worse, I had a large class starting where each student would need his or her own Wordpress installation and make various changes.

VPS Web HostingAfter a bit of research on hosting services claiming to be Wordpress-friendly, I decided to give Westhost a try. The prices are highly competitive, but not so cheap that I suspect a scam. In addition, the Winter Special gave me unlimited databases which would allow me to set up the 13 separate Wordpress installations I needed for my students. The account sign up was very smooth and I got a prompt response with my account information. The account instructions were very clear and offered me several options for additional information. This may not seem important, but I have worked with far too many small business clients with horror stories of confusion that led to costly mistakes or delays. Clear instructions for changing the DNS, setting up mail accounts and ftp access for file upload was a good sign that Westhost paid attention to customer service.

How serious is Westhost about customer service? Well, I signed up for the account because I was wanting to catch a sale at my domain name registrar dotster.com and figured I do it all at once. But then I got slammed with work. A week passed and I hadn’t set up my Westhost account mail or site.  The phone rings. It’s my Westhost account representative calling to see if there is any problem or if I need any help because he noticed I hadn’t even logged into my account since signing up!

Westhost uses a different control panel than I have used in the past. I have been using C/Panel on my other accounts, but it only took 5 minutes to get used to the Westhost Site Manager. It is very clean. The items most site managers want often are in the left-hand navigation. Things that are used rarely or set up only once (normally), such as applications like Wordpress or Zen Cart, are under the Site Applications section. This may take a up to a few moments to load, because there are so many excellent tools and applications.

One thing that was a bit of a surprise is that MySQL and phpMyAdmin are not already installed. I discoverd this when I chose to install Wordpress through the Site Manager. This was not a problem, however. The Site Manager immediately recognized that I needed to install MySQL first and then phpMyAdmin before installing Wordpress and walked me through the steps. At one point, to test the system, I deliberately wandered from the process. But I didn’t trick the Site Manager! When I attempted to install Wordpress without having completed the phpMyAdmin process, the Site Manager took me back to the phpMyAdmin install and then moved on to the Wordpress installation. At first, I wasn’t certain I liked having to do my own MySQL and phpMyAdmin installation, but as soon as I started working with the programs I immediately discovered the advantages. I have full control over my set up! No more permission problems with my database driven applications.

Now what about a serious real world Wordpress test review?

So now came the real test. For my class I set up 12 manual installations of Wordpress, each with 6 Themes beyond the defaults and 3 plugins. Then I turned my students, some of whom had never used Wordpress before, loose with administrative privileges! Each student had to make some changes to the various settings, create some content, add some media, find and install plugins with the “Add New” feature,change themes, and make some changes to the theme stylesheet with the Editor. Then they each got a week to play around making modifications on their own.

Everything worked like a dream! Download time for each installation was fast, no one had a problem with the integrated “Add New” plugin feature of Wordpress 2.7.1. And the only person who had any problems with the Theme editor discovered it was because she’d installed the WP-Super-Cache plugin, so she wasn’t seeing any changes to her pages because they were being fed from her cache! One of the smart alecs in the class (there’s always one) tried to cause problems with his installation — huge file uploads, lots of random theme changes, dozens of plugins installed — but everything kept working beautifully.

I am now moving my primary web sites to Westhost and starting to test it with other CMS programs. So far, everything has gone smoothly. I have received concise, timely notices of any schedule maintenance to my server (and the time of the service has been ideal and no longer than 5 minutes in length). While it appears that Westhost is owned by a large parent company that maintains a number of hosting services, I have never felt like just one in thousands of accounts. Westhost has had all the feel of a high-quality, boutique service.

I can recommend Westhost highly for anyone looking for a Wordpress-friendly hosting service, especially if they want to have multiple installations of Wordpress or other CMS programs.

Oh, and did I mention the $50 AdWords credit for setting up a new account? Sweet! AdWords Optimizer here I come (I’ll be posting more about AdWords and Search Engine Marketing soon).

{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Adam March 16, 2009 at 8:04 am

Thank you for the great comments that you have made about WestHost. We appreciate our clients and want them to have an excellent experience with us. It is great to be able to confidently tell a client that WestHost’s client service is unbeatable. The reason I can confidently tell a client about WestHost’s commitment to its clients is because of great feed back like this. Thank you for your business. Hope you have a great day!

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