theWHIR's Reseller Review - Build your Web Hosting Brand
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Interland Announces New Dedicated Reseller Discounts
UP to 25% Off Managed Dedicated Plans
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IBM Targets Web Hosting as Growth Area 
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Web Host Spry Adds New Reseller Plans 
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Dot5Hosting Offering $2.50 Domains
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Hosts May Consider IPOs, Netcraft Says 
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OSDL Upgrades Linux Kernel Testing
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Web Host Amen Pulls Print Ad 
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Feature Article ..

You May Already Be a Reseller  

By Max Smetannikov 

August 25, 2004 -- (WEB HOST INDUSTRY REVIEW) --  By day, George Roberts is a systems 
analyst for a Fortune 500 company. 

By night, he is the chief executive, chief geek and head janitor at Interjuncture, a 
one-man Web hosting firm serving 40 

customers and 150 Web sites. 

In the offline world, Roberts is what you'd call a regular guy. He likes computers, 
has a wife and two kids and a swarm 

of pets â a dog and two cats. In the hosting arena, he is a part of a growing group 
of individuals that are joining Web 

designers in one of the hottest trends in Web hosting. 

Roberts occupies a range of expertise, investment and time that many hosting customers 
already occupy. Many of them Web 

designers and hobbyists, these users may be involved in managing several hosting 
accounts and, more importantly, may 

already be doing the work of a Web hosting provider. 

This growing segment of advanced Web hosting customers is a potential goldmine for 
larger hosting firms, which already 

have the relationships, already provide all the back-end services and need only to 
help these customers make the 

potentially lucrative transition into becoming Web hosting resellers. The unique 
selling proposition of this 

micro-hosting reseller setâlots of hand-holding. 

"Because I am a one-man show I am hands on and talk to customers a lot," said Roberts. 
"With me, you go straight to the 

top." 

Roberts doesn't advertise his services. All he does by way of marketing is list 
Aurora, Illinois-based Interjuncture on 

Web hosting directories and rely on word of mouth. His expenses amount to an account 
with a hosting company and some 

outlays for software. His pricing strategy is mid-range â Roberts doesn't go for 
volume but figures his premium makes 

the difference for customers who need personalized services. This means that his 
shared hosting plan â Interjuncture's 

least expensive offering â costs $4 a month as opposed to $1 a month. 

Interjuncture wouldn't be operational if it weren't for three tools. First, a control 
panel allows Roberts to set up 

accounts, add services, maintain customer profiles and initiate billing via a single 
Web interface. Roberts uses Ensim, 

though other control panels are available. Second is his billing software. Roberts 
doesn't track usage by end users, 

doesn't estimate billing and doesn't lick envelopes when mailing out bills â 
instead, he runs his business on 

ModernBill, a system designed with Web hosts in mind by Modern Gigabyte. Finally, 
Roberts outsources his technical 

support and customer service. Yes, he is available for his customers, but the flood of 
inevitable mundane questions is 

handled by a system called eSupport, from Kayako. 

Together, these three tools allow Roberts to run his Web hosting business in as little 
as 10 to 15 hours a week. 

"This is not a hobby, since there is time and money involved," he says. "However it is 
nice to take something you get 

lots of satisfaction from and make it into a business." 

Web hosts and vendors that enable businesses like Interjuncture have taken notice of 
this new trend. Ensim, the control 

panel maker that supports Interjuncture, has launched an entire program addressing the 
needs of the ultra-small Web 

hosting resellers. Called Ignite and launched this spring, the program aims to 
popularize Ensim tools not just with a 

handful of large hosts, but with a wider universe of Web hosting providers. 

Ensim's research indicates there are 44 million domain names in the US alone, a 
stunning number when you consider how 

operators like Roberts are making hosting probably one of the most competitive 
industries under the sun. 

Accidental Web hosts have been part of this industry as long as there was Web hosting. 
Some of the very first Web hosts 

were Web designers who sought to streamline their client relationships by giving 
access to their Web servers so that 

customers could view their sites as an end user would see them. Another group that has 
long been finding its way into 

Web hosting is network and systems consultants who help clients develop sites as part 
of larger contract engagements. 

It wasn't until relatively recently that Web hosting became automated and 
sophisticated enough for individuals like 

Roberts to be able to provide quality service on a truly part-time basis â in 
off-hours from his job, and without 

requiring him to spend too much time away from his family. 

Ignite has been specifically structured to address the needs of this new wave of Web 
hosts. The big idea was that the 

very small hosts neither have the time nor the money to negotiate good supplier deals 
from third parties. Through 

Ignite, Ensim does that for them, setting them up with a payment merchant system, an 
SSL certificate for transactions, 

an email marketing campaign engine and a search engine optimization tool. 
Interjuncture is an example that these tools 

can be optional, and if all a host wants is a control panel, a control panel it gets. 
The magic of this program is that 

there is no money up front. Ensim gets a portion of each sale instead, or a referral 
if a third party's product is sold. 

"We just launched this program a couple of months ago and already have 700 sign-ups," 
says TJ Dupont, Ensim's director 

of product marketing. 

Web hosts view this phenomenon as another entryway into the 5 million-strong SMB 
market in the US. Several companies 

have staked out their claims for the very-small business market, including Interland, 
Hostopia and Alabanza. Franc 

Nemanic, founder and president of Hostopia, defines this market of part-time hosts as 
companies run by one or two 

individuals, supporting between 150 and 200 sites. 

Hostopia's offering for this kind of user provides, not surprisingly, outsourced 
billing services and tech support. But 

the future of this business is not with more automation, says Nemanic, but with 
helping these resellers better define 

and address their niches as well as develop more sophisticated offerings. 

Applications are the next frontier for the likes of Interjuncture, with hosted Outlook 
and spam filters leading the way. 

Helping resellers better define their market is a more complex problem, in Nemanic's 
view. "This is a segment of the 

market looking for a franchise concept," he says. 

Indeed, if entrepreneurs like Roberts are all buying essentially the same automation 
and penetrate their communities by 

making them franchisees? Nemanic is still pondering the idea of charging for the 
brand, however it's easy to see where 

he is getting the idea â his local office supplies store. 

Staples is now offering Web hosting along with copying and ink jet paper. And if that 
seems like a bit of a stretch, 

consider that Costco is doing the same â continuing with the bulk-shopping motif in 
cyberspace. Two industries where the 

franchising of Web hosting services would be especially effective, Nemanic says, are 
real estate firms catering to their 

own agents; and dentists. 

Brand building works the other way around too. Web hosts have an uncanny ability to 
come out from nowhere and establish 

themselves as a go-to brand in a niche industry. Consider Ink21, a customer of 
Hostopia. The name probably doesn't ring 

any bells with anyone who doesn't speak Cantonese, but the firm is one of the most 
popular Chinese-American Web hosts. 

"Ink21 caters to Chinese entrepreneurs on the West coast, and is good in catering to 
this ethnic market and lifestyle," 

says Nemanic. 

Advances in software and services have blurred the line between the sizable hosting 
customer and the small hosting 

provider and all-but-eliminated the barriers to starting a small reseller hosting 
business. The challenge, now, is for 

the hosting providers and software vendors that are already dealing with these 
customers to make it known how close they 

already are to operating reseller hosting businesses of their own. 


more interviews, news .. www.thewhir.com/marketwatch

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 Copyright 2004 Web Host Industry Review, Inc. For more 
information, please contact us at www.thewhir.net.
87 River Street Toronto, Ontario M5A 3P4




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