Most businesses nowadays have
online presence and recent statistics show that online sales have grown
exponentially in the past years rivaling their retail sales. The online store however is managed,
maintained and monitored quite differently from the physical store, forcing old
school entrepreneurs to educate themselves further. This article tackles of the issues of concern
which is website uptime and what it means for an online business.
Uptime or website availability must
be monitored 24/7 so that you are aware if there are any problems or glitches
on your site as soon as it happens. You can then address the problem before any
of your visitors see them. Remember that
websites are aimed to please visitors and prospective clients – there is
nothing pleasing about a page that is not loading properly or fats enough or
worse, if the website can’t be found!
Keeping track of your website’s
uptime assures you that your website is getting the most amounts of viewers it
can possibly get. Uptime is measured in
percentages and if the web hosting service has offered you 99.9% uptime that means your site is up
99.9% of the time.
So what does that translate
to? If your website is a revenue
generating site (which means you appreciate explanations in dollar percentages
rather than time) and your site that earns $100 a day, 99% equates to a loss of
10 cents a day, $3 a month and $36.50 a year.
And of course, the higher the earning the higher the loss.
There are web hosting companies
that refund the loss if your site’s uptime falls below the guarantee, but they
only do that if you have proof. The
dilemma is that you can’t possibly be on uptime monitoring duty all the
time. But there is no need to look bleak,
there are website monitoring services
available out there and the service extends to monitoring site speeds and
hacker alerts and over-all website performance.
Sure, there are free services but
the only monitor web uptime every 30 minutes that is not frequent enough. If
you are guaranteed at 99% uptime that is a downtime of about 15 minutes a
day. You can’t possibly know if you had
a downtime of more than 15 minutes if the site-monitor checks every 30 minutes!
Furthermore, being alerted that your site is down 30 minutes later could mean a
loss of a substantial number of visitors.