Have you ever opened a site on the document and witnessed no visible activity? This has happened to me on numerous occasions when I have needed it most. The experience was incredibly irritating. This is all happened because of hosting outage.
Why are there Global Hosting Outages?
In most cases,
Global Hosting Outages are caused by some combination of the following analysis findings:
- Data Center Power Outage
- Internet Network Disruptions
- Poorly Implemented Software Updates
- Denial of Service Attacks (DDoS) like others.
When a major provider suffers a disruption, a considerable number of their clients’ websites will cease function. This is due to the majority of their clients utilizing the same server infrastructure.
Major Providers Can Fail at Once
There was once a time when all email and application platforms ceased working simultaneously. Although this may seem shocking, it is quite common when it does occur. That is because most popular web services use a small pool of
Cloud Providers like
AWS and
Google Cloud. Thus, when these
Cloud Providers go down, many of their clients are compromised too.
The Impact of Hosting Outages on You
For Website Owners
Outages can have a major impact on your business. Some examples of the consequences are:
- Financial Loss
- Angry Visitors
- Decreased Search Engine Ranking
I lost all sales from my
VPS being down for 24 hours. It was painful.
For Regular Users
Outages also affect our day-to-day lives - videos won't play, payments won't go through, etc., and tools that we rely on to do our jobs freeze up! Can you feel the frustration?
What You Can Do to Prepare
There are a few very simple steps you can do for yourself.
While there’s nothing you can do to
prevent hosting outages, the following preparations can help:
• Select hosting provider with a history of excellent uptime record
• Use tools to monitor your website for downtime
• Ensure your important online services are hosted with multiple companies
I would rather trust a
hosting company that clearly explains their problems than one that remains silent about an
outage. Silence is worse than the actual outage.