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weebly

It seems everyone’s looking for simple, inexpensive solutions for hosting their websites. Happily loads of tools exist to help you get a site up quickly. While I’ve provided in-depth comparisons of many of these tools in the past—as well as explored available options in our small business blogging guide—here is a quick summary of eight quality offerings.

Weebly

Weebly advanced signup thumbOne of the long-time leaders in the space, Weebly has continued to enhance their offering since I last reviewed them.

Pros:

Cons:

  • Limited e-commerce options
  • Only ad-free in the paid versions (though, again, those options are fairly inexpensive)

Cost: Free as long as you’re OK with advertisements (you shouldn’t do this, though). Paid versions start at $3.99/month. Domains are expensive through Weebly, so buy your domain elsewhere and direct it to your Weebly site instead.

Squarespace

Squarespace logoAnother strong offering that continues to grow in features and functionality. I reviewed Squarespace last year and they continue to impress.

Pros:

  • Powerful
  • Very flexible (especially if you have CSS development chops)
  • Unlimited bandwidth at higher plan options
  • Excellent customer support (arguably the best in the business)

Cons:

  • Expensive relative to other options

Cost: Starts at $12/month.

Jimdo

Jimdo logoJimdo continues to challenge Weebly and Squarespace for top billing. While not as powerful as Squarespace, Jimdo offers loads of options at a reasonable price. Well worth checking out.

Pros:

  • Powerful, even at the free levels
  • Loads of third-party widgets
  • Surprisingly strong e-commerce support
  • Highly customizable at paid levels
  • Lots of language options

Cons:

  • Blogging platform not as strong as others
  • SEO editing capabilities limited relative to competition
  • Domain hosting requires paid versions

Cost: Free. Starts at $5/month ad-free with domain hosting.

Yola

Yola logoFormerly known as SynthSite, Yola provides an excellent site editing tool and decent features, but is expensive relative to others for what you get.

Pros:

  • Easy to use editor. It’s not the most intuitive, but isn’t hard to use once you gain some familiarity with it.
  • Lots of third-party widget options
  • Very good customer support

Cons:

  • Relatively expensive compared to the other options
  • Limited customization options
  • Only allows Google Analytics integration at the highest paid level
  • Poor built-in analytics

Cost: Free. $9.95/month to remove Yola advertising and add Google Analytics for your site (which you’ll definitely want to do).

SiteKreator

Sitekreator logoSiteKreator takes a slightly different approach than many of the others in this round-up. While they offer self-maintained sites like the others here, they also offer a “Deluxe” package where their designers will build a completely custom site for your business. I can’t recommend their “self-managed” solutions (most others here offer more power for less money), but if you need a custom site, their Deluxe offering is worth a look.

Pros:

  • Loads of flexibility at highest paid level

Cons:

  • Expensive

Cost: Starts at $19.95/month for self-created websites. $79.95/month + a one-time $500 setup fee for a custom SiteKreator-built site.

Homestead

Homestead logoThis offering from Intuit plays on its parent’s relationship with small business owners but doesn’t offer the bang for the buck of its competition. You’re almost certainly better served with other options, even for e-commerce. So, why include it? If you plan on doing heavy e-commerce volume, Homestead’s customer support and credit card processing features make it worth a look.

Pros:

  • Decent e-commerce capabilities at highest paid level
  • Strong customer support

Cons:

  • Expensive
  • Blogging tool is a hassle to work with
  • SEO capabilities could be better at lower-price level

Cost: Starts at $4.95/month. $19.95/month for blogging, e-commerce and custom domain options (which, again, you likely should choose).

Tumblr

Tumblr logoSeriously? Tumblr? Yes, Tumblr. While it’s much more a blogging tool than a full-fledged content management system (CMS), building a simple site on Tumblr is fast, easy and fun. And its social tools can help drive traffic and interest in your site. While it’s not for everyone, for the simplest sites, Tumblr may be exactly what the doctor ordered.

Pros:

  • Incredibly simple site builder
  • Free
  • Surprisingly robust, especially if you’re comfortable with CSS
  • Loads of templates to choose from, with lots of customization option. “Premium” templates are inexpensive
  • Excellent mobile options
  • Built-in social integration

Cons:

  • Limited support apart from the Tumblr community
  • Setting up your own domain requires you to manage A name records at your domain host (this page is the entirety of Tumblr’s support for the process)
  • Not a full-fledged content management system

Cost: Free. Truly. You’ll have to buy your own domain elsewhere, but free unless you choose to purchase a “premium” template.

Wordpress

Wordpress logoI’ve long been a fan of Wordpress. Despite its origins as a blogging platform, Wordpress has grown into a fairly robust CMS in its own right. While not a great option for e-commerce applications (you’ll need a separate, third-party option for that), for many small business sites, Wordpress offers exactly the right features at a reasonable cost.

Pros:

  • Great content editor and world-class standard blogging platform
  • Excellent community
  • Fully customizable (for an additional fee)
  • Terrific SEO capabilities
  • Tons of plug-ins and widgets
  • Ability to move to your own host if necessary
  • Inexpensive

Cons:

  • Support options are not as good as other paid choices (though, as noted, Wordpress has an excellent community around it)
  • Setting up your own domain requires you to manage A name records at your domain host (this page is the entirety of Tumblr’s support for the process)

Cost: Free. Starts at $41.97/year to remove ads and add your own domain (effectively $3.50/month). Custom designs cost $30/year.

Conclusion

Any of the options discussed above will help you get a quality website online quickly and easily. And with prices ranging from a couple bucks per year to a couple hundred, none will bust your budget. Obviously, your specific needs will determine which offering works best for your business. But, if you don’t have a website, the options presented above demonstrate why that shouldn’t be true any longer. Take a look and start engaging with your customers online today.

Disclosures: I am an affiliate of eBay ProStores, Amazon, Dreamhost, the Thesis theme platform and (as of October, 2011), Squarespace but received no compensation for writing this post from anyone. While I recommend Squarespace for those that need its power and flexibility, it’s not right for everyone. I also recommend you look at other, lower-priced options to determine whether Squarespace is right for your business.


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I’ve been telling small business owners and marketers for years why you must have a website to promote your business. And with the variety of great tools out there, there’s no good reason why you can’t have a solid site that meets your customers’ needs.

But, knowing you need a site and knowing how to get one are two different things. So, some time ago, we started looking at tools that let you host your site effectively and inexpensively. Next up: Squarespace. Squarespace is one of the more popular options for hosting robust sites. But is it right for you? thinks is on the case.

Squarespace Overview

Squarespace has been around since 2004 and powers sites large and small for several thousand customers. They claim to have been profitable since their first year of operation—no mean feat given the economy the last few years and the amount of competition in the space. Unlike earlier tools we’ve looked at, Squarespace is not free, with prices beginning at $12/month (the company offers a 14-day free trial for new users). But, you do get a lot for your money. The real question is whether the cost is worth it for you. Hang with me for a bit and I’ll let you know what I think.

Features

Setting up a new site on Squarespace is a breeze. The company seems to have given lots of thought to what most customers will want to do. Need a home page and blog? Piece of cake. For the $12 monthly fee, you get up to 10 pages that cover just about everything you could want to do on a small business website.

Adding pages is simple and quick, offering diverse options, including galleries, forms, search and “journals” which is Squarespace’s version of a blog. The form builder requires a “Business” level account ($36/month), but incorporating Wufoo or Google Forms is easy.

Squarespace Add a Page feature

If you opt for a “Business” account, the form editor is excellent. You can choose to save data to an Excel spreadsheet, have it e-mailed directly to an address of your choosing or both. It also sends confirmation emails and provides unique confirmation messages after form submissions.

Squarespace new form builder

I was able to set up a fairly sexy contact form quickly and easily. As mentioned above, integrating outside tools is also simple.

Squarespace form editor

I have some concerns about privacy and data storage (i.e., sending PII in unencrypted emails), but this is still a very exciting feature for small businesses that may not have the ability to add these features easily on existing sites. I also wish Squarespace offered more robust database capture features, but, the very fact I find myself wishing for more robust database capture tells you just how sophisticated it is compared to most other tools out there.

Blogging and Content Capabilities

Squarespace lets you include any HTML or images directly within any page and can include off-site navigation easily. Very nice if you’re hosting a blog or store outside of your Squarespace site. The tool offers a relatively powerful blog editor, if you choose not to host your blog somewhere else. For instance, the blog editor offers Autosave as you’re writing, which, speaking from experience, is a life-saving feature when you need it.

In all, I found Squarespace’s blogging tool somewhat of a double-edged sword. Here are two examples why:

  1. Lots of useful integration with social sites and other tools. Awesome if you want to publish your content via Facebook and Twitter.
  2. The tool has no plug-in architecture like Wordpress or other blogging platforms (for instance, it could really use something like Akismet for blocking spam). Third-party apps are a big part of Wordpress’s success and something I’d love to see Squarespace add in the future.

Another strike? There’s no FTP upload of images and the like. If you’re going to put product images on the site, could be a bit of a problem. You can upload a single self-extracting zip file, but handling the images after the fact could get to be a hassle. The company claimed in a blog post late last year to be working on this feature—they’ve already addressed the other items in the post—so it may just be a matter of time before this issue goes away.

Speaking of the items they announced last fall, Squarespace offers a very slick iPad app. Nice. If you’re a Squarespace user, it might just belong in your essential iPad blogging apps. A couple of known issues exist in the iPhone app/iPad app, but the support team seems responsive, courteous, and helpful. There’s also a robust community on the site, too. For instance, I was able to find answers to almost every question I had about the tool within their excellent forums.

Squarespace iPad app

SEO

Of course, getting people to your content often requires Google’s help. Fortunately, Squarespace has given obvious thought to how well on-site SEO works. For instance, you can easily configure URL shortcuts for any page on your site with your choice of 301 or 302 redirects. Unbelievably cool. And if that last sentence meant nothing to you, don’t worry. It will to Google. And that’s a Very Good Thing.

Squarespace URL shortcuts with 301 Redirects

E-commerce

Like most other hosted content solutions, Squarespace doesn’t handle e-commerce directly. And that’s OK. Adding a link to an offsite store is just a matter of adding a title to your navigation bar and pasting in the URL to your store:
Squarespace adding a link to e-commerce store

You can choose whether to open that store link in a new window, or—the default (and correct) choice—continue the session within the existing browser window. Nice. Simple. Awesome.

Obviously, you can add a link to any site the same way. Very handy if you’re using third-party services for features on your site (blogs, e-commerce, forums and the like come immediately to mind).

Analytics

Squarespace comes pre-configured with its own analytics package and offers most of the basic reporting you’d want:

  • Traffic
  • Referrers (i.e., where traffic is coming from)
  • Popular Content
  • Search queries

For simple sites, this is probably enough. More sophisticated sites would likely want to add Google Analytics, Omniture or other sorts of tracking, which Squarespace allows with its Code Injection feature. Code Injection is very sophisticated, giving you loads of options for where to place your code:

Squarespace code injection throughout document

Unfortunately, as with other advanced features, this comes at a price (an “Advanced” or “Business” account, $20/month or $36/month, respectively). While I understand the decision to limit Code Injection to more sophisticated users, I’m not sure I agree with the company limiting the addition of improved analytics. In my mind, knowing what your customers are doing on your site should not be an “Advanced” option.

Updated: Reader Darren Wright informs me,

“…on the entry level i.e. Standard you get one injection point… which is all you need to add Google Analytics to your site.

So for $12 a month you can have a site with Google Analytics, no problem.”

That’s very welcome information. As I noted originally, knowing what your customers do on your site should not be an “Advanced” option. Of course, if you need more than one Code Injection point for some reason, you would need an “Advanced” or “Business” account. Of course, if you need more than one Code Injection point, it’s entirely probable your business needs can accommodate the higher cost.

Look and Feel

Out of the box, Squarespace provides 60 different themes for your website. Well… more like 5 basic themes with multiple variations each. These themes are very professional and very attractive, if a trifle basic. Compared with other tools I’ve looked at, Squarespace leans more towards the professional end of the spectrum. For most businesses, that’s a Very Good Thing.

In addition, Squarespace offers one of the most robust editing suites I’ve seen for customizing your site’s look and feel. Their Appearance Editor—including a robust CSS editor—is, to use a technical term, bad-ass.

Squarespace appearance editor

Of course, as Spiderman’s Uncle Ben liked to say, “with great power comes great responsibility.” When compared with the theme overlays of other tools, this requires lots more work. The flip-side is, if you can envision it, the Appearance Editor has just about every tool you could want to make it happen. This is more good than bad. And you don’t need to go anywhere near it if you don’t want.

One minor quibble: the “Save Changes” button—especially in the Appearance Editor—could be more prominent. I failed to save changes a couple of times and found I had to re-do some work. Not a huge deal, but more of a pain than I’d like it to be. Ideally, if you’re working with this level of customization, you’ll remember to save early and often.

Costs

OK, so the 14-day trial is nice, but how much does Squarespace cost you over the long-run?

Here’s the breakdown. Squarespace offers three account levels:

  • Standard ($12/month)
  • Advanced ($20/month)
  • Business ($36/month)

Multiple custom HTML injection points (needed for things like Google Analytics or Website Optimizer) requires an “Advanced” account ($20/month). The form builder is only available on “Business” accounts ($36 per month).

The cheapest option is $128/year for 2 years, which isn’t a ton of money for a professional-looking and robust site. I’m just not sure it’s your best choice. Yes, you get:

  • 10 pages
  • 3GB of storage
  • 1 TB of bandwidth

But other options provide similar capabilities at a lower cost. On the other hand, it will run you $432/annually for a “Business” account ($384 if you sign up for 2 years at a time). Just under $400/year for their top-tier “Business” account is a pretty good deal for what you get. Most businesses would likely need to hire a designer to deal with the heavy-duty CSS editing, but when you’re ready for a “pro-level” site, that’s probably a given no matter what solution you choose.

Conclusion

So, what do I think of Squarespace? Well, I think it is frickin’ cool. Seriously. I’m a fan. You get heavy-duty hosting capabilities, content portability and sophisticated editing control for a reasonable price.

What do I hate? It isn’t free. It’s not the most profitable option for folks interested in reseller accounts. But, if you’re interested in a high-quality, professional-caliber hosted solution, it’s a great option.

To me, it’s more a question of design philosophy. Squarespace is not just a blog-hosting tool, but a full-featured replacement for traditional hosting/web development. At the lower price points, I think you can do better. But when you’re ready for a fully-hosted, robust platform, Squarespace definitely is worth giving a look. I suggest you check it out. You just might like what you see.

Full disclosure: I am an affiliate of ProStores, Amazon, Dreamhost and (as of October, 2011, Squarespace) but received no compensation for writing this post from anyone.

 


Are you getting enough value out of your small business website? Want to make sure your business makes the most of the local, mobile, social web? thinks helps you understand how to grow your business via the web, every day. Get more than just news. Get understanding. Add thinks to your feed reader today.

 

Or subscribe via email.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to follow Tim on Twitter.

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Even if you’re using a third-party solution for building your small business website, I’ve long recommended owning your own domain. Fortunately, tools such as Weebly, WordPress, Yola and Squarespace make it easy to use your own domain on their hosted solutions.

But I also believe you need to be able to move your hosting if you choose to. Why? Well, if you’ve ever had your hosting company disappear in the middle of the night (as I have), you don’t want to leave your customers hanging. Which is one of the reasons I’ve always liked WordPress. Since the same software runs both on WordPress’s hosted site and on just about any other web host, moving your site is about as simple as it can be.

Now WordPress has made it even easier to move your site. Companies and bloggers hosting on WordPress.com can easily redirect traffic to a new location just by filling in a simple form on your WordPress Domain Settings, under Offsite Redirect:

WordPress Offsite Redirect

Cool, eh?

That’s not to say that this is the only reason for choosing a host. But, kudos to WordPress for recognizing the value of alternative hosting options for small businesses and making it easy to pick the best one for your needs.



Are you getting enough value out of your small business website? Want to make sure your business makes the most of the local, mobile, social web? thinks helps you understand how to grow your business via the web, every day. Get more than just news. Get understanding. Add thinks to your feed reader today.

Or subscribe via email.

And while you’re at it, don’t forget to follow Tim on Twitter.

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