Security, Hosting & Ownership
The most expensive website problems are the quiet ones: the domain registered in an ex-developer's name, the backup that was never tested, the WordPress install nobody updated since launch. None of them announce themselves until the day they cost you the site.
These guides cover the unglamorous ownership layer: where to host and what hosting actually is, what a maintenance plan should include, security basics sized for a small team, what to do the day you get hacked, and how to make sure the domain, hosting, and admin accounts belong to your business and not to whoever built the site.
8 guides
Who Should Own Your Domain, Website, and Hosting?
A practical guide to domain, website, hosting, email, and account ownership so your business does not get locked out later.
Read the guideWhere Should a Guyana Business Host Its Website? Local vs Overseas Hosting Compared
Where should a Guyana business host its website? An honest local vs overseas comparison, why a CDN often beats server location, and a decision matrix.
Read the guideCybersecurity Basics for Guyanese Businesses Moving Online
Practical cybersecurity basics for small businesses in Guyana: protect accounts, data, backups, and customer information as you move online.
Read the guideCustomer Data Privacy Basics for Small Businesses in Guyana
How small businesses should collect, store, use, share, and delete customer information responsibly as more work moves online.
Read the guideBackups and Disaster Recovery: What Happens If Your Website or Business Data Is Lost
Backups and disaster recovery for small business data in Guyana: the false backups, the 3-2-1 rule, recovery time vs recovery point, and a plan by size.
Read the guideShared, VPS, or Cloud Hosting: What Web Hosting Actually Is and Which You Need
Shared vs VPS vs cloud hosting explained plainly for Guyana: what hosting is, how the types compare on speed, reliability, and cost, and which you need.
Read the guideWhat Should a Website Maintenance Plan Include?
What a proper website maintenance plan should include: hosting, updates, backups, security, uptime checks, content edits, and plain reporting.
Read the guideWhat to Do If Your Business Website Gets Hacked
A calm first-response guide for hacked business websites: contain the issue, restore safely, protect accounts, and prevent repeat attacks.
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