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Domain Name Deals

We’ve been fighting it for years. Unwitting customers come to us and complain that we’re charging for services that should be “free.” After all, “free web hosting and domains are available everywhere.”

Well, maybe, but not really. There are some deals out there if you want to present commercials along with your content. Buy why would you? Your customers are valuable. Why would you want to sell access to them in order to save on reasonable hosting rates? That’s what your site is for- to get your company or organization’s message to interested visitors. You shouldn’t want to share valuable site space any more than you’d want to hang random ads around your store.

It’s important to pay for web hosting and avoid “free” services. It is just as important to avoid gimmicky pricing for domain names.

For example, many registrars will offer $2-domains, or other super-low promotional prices for domain names, as a hook to draw in unsuspecting clients. Below-cost pricing is effective because the low price encourages buyers to think a hosting company’s websites are a bargain.

But consider:

  • The domain name is just one part of the website. The domain is just the address. Users still need web hosting (think of it as rent for the space where your website resides) and authoring of the actual website. Most users also expect to add email addresses- joe@theirdomain.com. Some companies charge for basic site updates or access to their server.
  • Customers don’t always realize it’s a short-term promotion. In the case of under-priced promotions, the second and subsequent years’ fees are usually much (much) higher- many times higher than if they had charged a more standard price.
  • In some cases the registrar even owns your domain and effectively leases it to back to you. If you try to change your hosting, you might have to pay a large fee to keep the domain you’ve been using, and advertising(!) for the entire time you’ve had had the site. Even established or personal names are at risk for this scam! What other reason would a host want to retain ownership?
    This is where we remind you to read the fine print.
    Imaging Specialist’s philosophy is simple: Our customers own their sites and their domain names.

It is best to go with a company who maintains pricing transparency. Let’s face it- there are as many deals out there as there are hosting companies. Most are honest, but the old saying still applies, “Buyer beware.” If a company gives away free services, they have to make it back somehow, or else they won’t be in business long.

Unethical or just unwise, why would anyone want to risk it?

 

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BookFest Author Collaborations

Some of the authors who have participated in BookFest have been working together on some interesting new projects:

At The Shops at the Senator’s House, during the authors’ meeting, Tim Bullard, author of Haunted Watauga County, interviewed Doug Butler, author of After Appomattox: NC Civil War Monuments. The interview was published in the Mooresville Tribune and the Morganton News-Herald.

Ginger Collins is putting together some exciting programs for the Alleghany Arts Council. Georgann Eubanks, author of Literary Trails of North Carolina series, will be discussing her newest book Literary Trails of Eastern North Carolina at the Alleghany County Library. Ms. Eubanks had planned to be at November’s BookFest, but was unable to attend. The program will be Saturday, January 18 at 11:00 am.

Next month William L. Andrews, UNC professor and author of The North Carolina Roots of African-American Literature will give a presentation. His program will be Saturday, February 8, at 11:00 am at the Alleghany County Library.

Information on upcoming BookFest events will be coming soon.

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Rural Center Uses Our Rural Image

We were fortunate, this Christmas season, to have one of our photographs selected by the Rural Center for their Holiday Card. The image is of G.C. Green’s farm at New Hope (Laurel Springs area) in Alleghany County. The emails went out statewide and bumped our web site traffic this week. Thank You to the folks in Raleigh for giving us some exposure and highlighting our area!

The Rural Center is an outstanding resource that serves 85 NC Counties, and we appreciate their efforts on our behalf!