I used to be a very satisfied customer of Clook http://www.clook.co.uk
but I moved from them last month because I found their introductory
reseller packages a bit expensive (e.g. the smallest only offered 2GB
of space). Other than that I would recommend them highly. Totally
reliable and first class support.
After a great deal of searching I settled on Vidahost https://www.vidahost.com and although I haven’t been with them long
enough to confirm it, they seem to be very reliable and quick to
respond to support issues (including via an 0800 number). Currently
they’re offering a half-price deal for CPanel/WHM reseller migration.
Roger
On 12 November 2012 12:17, SJ-Creative email@hidden wrote:
Hi everyone,
I am having real issues with my hoster FatCow in that my email has stopped working and they don’t seem to see a problem with it.
As my contract runs out at the end of this week, I am going to look at other hosting options.
Can people please give me suggestions on hosting companies please, ideally UK based if possible.
Obviously not FatCow, or ineedwebhosting either, as I have used them before and had issues with my inbox being wiped randomly.
I used to be a very satisfied customer of Clook http://www.clook.co.uk
but I moved from them last month because I found their introductory
reseller packages a bit expensive (e.g. the smallest only offered 2GB
of space). Other than that I would recommend them highly. Totally
reliable and first class support.
After a great deal of searching I settled on Vidahost https://www.vidahost.com and although I haven’t been with them long
enough to confirm it, they seem to be very reliable and quick to
respond to support issues (including via an 0800 number). Currently
they’re offering a half-price deal for CPanel/WHM reseller migration.
This company is extremely efficient and responsive, you get to talk to real humans who care when you have a problem. I’ve had responses back to questions within 30 seconds, although more typically within 15 to 30 minutes.
The ‘drawback’ is that they are a smallish outfit, with the potentially nagging question of whether they will still be around in a years time. The same could be asked of many big companies in the present climate though. Being small does seem to help them in being responsive though.
If interested get in touch with Neil Taylor: neil(dot)studyhost(at)gmail.com