Have you ever fret over the potential of your site crashing if your traffic suddenly spiked? I have been in that position too. My site actually slowed down on the shared hosting when the traffic increased. That was when I began to understand what cloud hosting is so scalable; it would scale to meet my needs.
So when you suddenly have more traffic to your site, you have more power available to you via your cloud hosting. When the traffic drops back off, it can drop back down and you don’t have to pay for the resources you aren’t using.
This gives you:
• Instant Access to More Resources – If you need more RAM or more CPU capacity, you'll get it.
• Load Balancing – Your traffic is shared across multiple servers.
• More Uptime – If one server fails, there is always another server to take its place.
I have personal experience with this. On shared hosting my site crashed after a few thousand visitors; with cloud hosting, ten times that amount was handled with ease.
• Flexibility – You can easily add more capacity quickly during spikes in resource consumption, and take down capacity later.
• Cost Savings – You are always only billed your monthly the bill for what you used.
• Growth – As your site grows, your service grows.
This is somewhat like renting the resources and processing capacity that you really need.
For me, it has that feeling of being a blend of both safety net and turbo charger. Once you try it I can't see going back.
What Does “Scalable” Mean?
Scalable means the hosting can scale up or down in resources with whatever the amount of site traffic is. You might think of it like a rubber band: it gets stretched when you need space, then relaxes when you don’t need space.So when you suddenly have more traffic to your site, you have more power available to you via your cloud hosting. When the traffic drops back off, it can drop back down and you don’t have to pay for the resources you aren’t using.
How Cloud Hosting Manages Traffic
Unlike regular hosting where your site is hosted on one server, with cloud hosting, your site is hosted on multiple servers (the cloud).This gives you:
• Instant Access to More Resources – If you need more RAM or more CPU capacity, you'll get it.
• Load Balancing – Your traffic is shared across multiple servers.
• More Uptime – If one server fails, there is always another server to take its place.
I have personal experience with this. On shared hosting my site crashed after a few thousand visitors; with cloud hosting, ten times that amount was handled with ease.
Why Businesses Appreciate It
Cloud Hosting provides services to all users, from individual small blogs to thousands of eCommerce sites. You can always be assured you will have just what you need.• Flexibility – You can easily add more capacity quickly during spikes in resource consumption, and take down capacity later.
• Cost Savings – You are always only billed your monthly the bill for what you used.
• Growth – As your site grows, your service grows.
This is somewhat like renting the resources and processing capacity that you really need.
Is it ever perfect?
Not exactly. Because you pay as you go, the charges can vary month to month. But I think I would rather pay a little more than to have my site go down or have service outages. What do you think?In summary
What makes cloud hosting so scalable is the simple aspect that it scales both up, and down, to your traffic. When your business has a peak of web traffic, you have access to more power, but during the quieter periods, there is little to no cost.For me, it has that feeling of being a blend of both safety net and turbo charger. Once you try it I can't see going back.