Good point. If the hosting company offers managed services on the
dedicated server contract, backups and the like should be included in
there.

-----Original Message-----
From: Larry C. Lyons [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2003 11:49 AM
To: CF-Community
Subject: Re: For all you freelancers and business owners

Erika,

Here's my experience. When my former employer EBStor.com suddenly closed

its doors, they were all set just to burn a CD with the customer's and
leave them in the lurch. Fortunately our network guy found a hosting
company that was willing to take over the contracts for their duration.

If I were you I'd talk with your hosting company. Then get an agreement
drawn up by a good lawyer that if anything happened to you, the hosting
company would take over the contracts. Just make sure that they get
recent
copies of your sites, and database backups on a regular basis.

larry

At 11:37 AM 11/13/2003, you wrote:
>What do you do in the event you no longer exist?
>
>By either death, disability or winning the lottery.
>
>What happens to your customers?
>Do you have something arranged with someone to take over?
>
>We need to come up with a solution soon, and I was curious about how
>any of you may deal with it.
>
>Our work for our clients are not one-offs. They are all using a hosted
>solution of ours on several dedicated servers. So if we disappeared off

>the face of the earth tomorrow, as long as there was someone to run the

>servers, they'd be fine ... But it's finding that someone. I toyed with

>the idea of asking the actual hosting company if they'd be interested
>... But before I do that, figured I'd get some other ideas, if there
>were any ...
>
>And it's not like I can put the code in escrow, because it's not just
>the code. They wouldn't have a clue what to do with the code, they need

>the service.
>
>Does any of that make sense?
>
>Cheers,
>Erika
>
>
>----------
>[

[Todays Threads] [This Message] [Subscription] [Fast Unsubscribe] [User Settings]

Reply via email to