HostNine Review – HostNine Coupon

Real HostNine Reviews – HostNine Discount Coupon Codes

Posts tagged ‘submissions’

A Small Orange Partners with Spring Metrics

Web Host News – Durham, NC – A Small Orange, a shared, reseller, VPS, and dedicated web hosting company with offices in Atlanta and Durham, NC, announced a strategic partnership with Spring Metrics, a leading provider of conversion analytics software.

A Small Orange recognized that their customers needed a better way to track online conversions, such as ecommerce sales, lead form submissions, and document downloads. After considerable research, they realized that most analytics providers were either too hard to use, too expensive, or both. “Spring Metrics is different- their conversion tracking solution is both easy to use, yet remarkably powerful,” noted Doug Hanna, CEO of A Small Orange.

While other analytics platforms require the services of a web developer, Spring Metrics is unique in that it is installed on a website through a straight forward, point-and-click interface. Websites owners only have to pay for Spring Metrics if their websites receive a significant volume of traffic. for smaller websites, the service is free.

“As a startup, we’re excited about A Small Orange’s ability to distribute our service to their extensive customer base,” explained Doug Kaufman, CEO of Spring Metrics.

A Small Orange’s customers can now use Spring Metrics to track their website’s ability to convert customers while they make strategic changes to their website’s content and marketing programs. Spring Metrics tracks conversions in real time, which provides webmasters with the instant feedback that they need in order to stay on top of their business.

About A Small OrangeA Small Orange is a leading provider of shared, reseller, VPS, and dedicated web hosting. Founded in Atlanta in 2003, A Small Orange’s mission is to provide service and not just servers. The company has nearly 40 employees around the world and servers in facilities throughout North America, Europe, and Asia.

About Spring MetricsSpring Metrics makes life easier for marketers and website owners by showing them which visitors become customers and generate revenue – simply, clearly and in real time. Rather than spending countless hours to sort through spreadsheets, or paying consultants thousands of dollars to decipher the data, Spring Metrics providesanswers to the most important questions such as “where did that customer come from, and how can I get more like them?”

Research, evaluate and learn more about website hosting at FindMyHost.com.

this entry was posted on Thursday, October 20th, 2011 at 9:11 am and is filed under Press Releases, Web Host News. you can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. you can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

What's the best server for me? Small business with a submissions manager on the website?

Hi there-I've been calling around and researching all day, trying to figure this out–but I'm getting sales pitches more than anything. what do you guys think–I have a small business that will rely heavily on a submissions manager online. Which hosting type do I need–my instincts say not to use a shared server, but do go with VPS. Which company is reasonable on this? I thought it should be around $25/month or $200/year. Anybody?

small business eh? go with shared, make sure they have a cpanal that gives you access to sql dbs, email management, etc. i run mines on hostrocket.com for less than $180 a month, unlim bandwidth, never downtime, i high recommend.

I agree with the above. Go with shared. a small consulting firm which has RHEL and CentOS expertise would probably be worth the money — CentOS is a free version of RHEL and while there are even apparently pirated copies of RHEL out there on the systems of RHEL customers, you can legally and legitimately use CentOS without infringing on RHEL's patents, trademarks and copyrighted materials. Linux is generally better than Windows-Based solutions for accessing the Internet because it really does give you more control over what comes in and out — one of my friends happened to get a look at the packets going out of his company and though he is not young he nearly quit. while they still do their stuff on Windows for the most part he is in charge of an OpenSuse network — and should they downsize it fine. Loss of income will be balanced by less vulnerability to theft of private information.

With efficient bandwidth, which we have, a shared server would probably be more cost-effective for a small business. I will repeat though, it is probably worthwhile to hire a consultant with knowledge of Red Hat Enterprise Linux AND CentOS because such a person will know exactly what cost-effective solution will be best for you. And most will be willing to discuss Windows and other solutions.