Overselling Web Hosting: What does it mean to you?
By Daniel Punch
2005-09-26
Overselling Web Hosting: What does it mean
to you?
Overselling is a big trend in the web-hosting world
at the moment. It's an easy way to get more out of
your servers than normally is possible. The basic
idea of overselling is that the majority of your clients
are only going to use a fraction of the resources
allocated to them so there's going to be a lot of
wasted bandwidth and space. Overselling involves taking
a gamble and selling more than you can handle assuming
that the unused resources will cover it.
Let's say for example that a server hard drive is
80GB and has 1200GB of bandwidth. The hosting company
has a look around and decides that to be competitive
they need to offer plans with 2GB of disk space and
40GB bandwidth. With these figures they can only offer
30 hosting packages per server. This leaves quite
a bit of wasted disk space and after a few months
the company will probably notice that their users
aren't using all of the available bandwidth. Because
of this the company then assumes that it can safely
sell at least 10 more packages on the one server.
If the original number of customers already covers
general costs then the extra packages provided by
overselling are pure profit.
The advantage of overselling for the host is that
they make more money off each server than they otherwise
normally would be able to. The advantage for the client
is that this extra revenue is usually transferred
on (at least in theory) by cheaper hosting packages
with more features. The problem is that these features
are often 'smoke and mirrors'. A few users would be
able to use their entire allotment without any trouble,
but if every single client were to build their website
up to maximum capacity the host wouldn't be able to
handle the sudden increase in demand without adding
extra hard drives, buying more bandwidth, or perhaps
even another server. This would most likely lead to
a fair amount of downtime.
Web hosts aren't going to advertise the fact that
they oversell. It's not something that will gain them
customers and it's likely to drive away a few. In
general however, they're likely to get away with it
without any real problems. The reason the idea even
exists is that it is true that the majority of websites
don't use all of the space that's allocated to them.
The problem is that it's not a particularly honest
way of dealing with clients. It's a little like the
'Emperor's New Clothes' where the host is just hoping
that no one notices the fact that a package is in
fact a little nude.
Overselling will generally not be a problem unless
a host gets too greedy and ends up selling much more
than they could possibly provide for. On the other
hand, it's not even necessary as the host can usually
make enough money to make ends meet without overselling.
It will generally be quite difficult for you to find
out whether or not a host oversells unless they specifically
advertise it, or they're well known for having problems
due to excessive overselling. Just make sure you do
some research and choose a reliable host, not necessarily
the one that appears to offer ridiculous amounts of
bandwidth or disk space for far too little money.