Starting your first website

Starting your first website

In this week’s blog post we will be taking you through the steps for making your first website.

Choose a name for your website

You may already have a name in mind, for example if you are making a website for your own business. If not, think of a name that will relate to the business area your site will be about.

You can use our Domain Checker to see if your domain is available to buy, and also check which TLD’s are available.

TLD stands for Top Level Domain, and they include .com, .co.uk, .net and so on.

Generally speaking, a .co.uk domain is good for a UK business and .com has a more international flavour. There are also a number of specific TLDs such as .club or .photos, these may be suitable for your business also.

Building the website

There are a number of ways of building your website, depending on the complexity and requirements of the site.

Online Website Creators

Services like Wix and Squarespace allow you to build a website with no technical knowledge, and many people find they can create a nice looking site in a few hours.

They typically use a drag and drop interface that is easy to use, but the downside is these types of sites tend to have limited functions and are tricky to customise in terms of adding functionality.

Depending on the package you sign up for you may be stuck with the company’s name in your domain name, like yoursite.thewebbuilder.com.
Hosting with web builder sites can also be fairly expensive when compared to other hosting solutions, although they do usually have good quality technical support that will fix your site for you.

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Content Management Systems

Content management systems (also known as CMSs) include WordPress, Drupal and Magento. WordPress is the most popular CMS today, and it is used in more than 29% of the world’s websites.

CMSs can be used with no coding or technical expertise, but can also be highly customised by web professionals.

Most of the top CMSs have vast libraries of plugins, addons and themes that you can install to modify your site, and if you should run in to any problems there are developer and user support forums available to help you.

If you are looking to take your first steps in to coding, or are just looking for more functionality than an online drag and drop site can offer, using a CMS might be the choice for you.

Hire a web developer

If you don’t have the technical skills or the time to build your own site, you should consider hiring a web developer to build it for you.

The upside of this option is that you will get a site built to your requirements by a web professional (ask to see some of their work before hiring them!).

However, having a site built can be expensive, particularly if you want a complex website. You may also be reliant on the developer for maintaining your site in the future.

Choose the right hosting package

Generally speaking our Web Hosting package is fine for most small to medium sites.

If you have a large site, or an ecommerce website then you may want to look at a VPS Hosting solution, and if you want the best performance possible with no shared resources you could look in to getting a Dedicated Cloud Server.

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We have scalable solutions for your website regardless of your requirements, if you are unsure of which hosting to get then please GET IN TOUCH, we will be happy to advise you.

Jason Douglas
Jason Douglas

Jason has been writing about technology for more than a decade. He graduated from the University of Chester with a B.A. in Journalism in 2008 and got started writing full-time shortly after that. He's covered everything from Windows XP to Red Star OS, but more recently has settled into the Apple ecosystem. Jason now writes regularly about VPS, Hosting, and Dedicate Server for publications like Mobohost Mag Beyond writing, Tim has professional experience in photography.

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