In this video I'm interviewing Arnas Stuopelis (CEO Hostinger) about how Hostinger sees themselves in the market. After this video I am uploading a similar interview with Siteground because they have a completely different view on Hosting. So stay tuned for that! Interested in Hostinger after this video? Explore the different options on Hostinger's website: livingwithpixels.com/hostinger - Get 10% off with the coupon code: LIVINGWITHPIXELS at checkout.
I remember when Hostinger were free hosting. Was the best option for starting to learn building with Wordpress. Since then I have being using Hostinger as one of my main hosting providers. Great content!
I've been with hostinger for 4 years now. No significant issues with them really. I had 2 shared business hosting with them and recently upgraded 1 to cloud hosting and the experience is seamless. And they credited my remaining year to equivalent months extension to the new cloud hosting I purchased with them that makes it to expire on 2027 instead of 2026. Great hosting company.
I love this guy. Rock star of hosting world. I had a basic website on Hostgator for 3 years. 60 USD, 100, 140. Just keep charging more and more for the same thing year after year. And Hostinger is actually better and cheaper! Best of both worlds. And I love how this guy just said what all hosting companies do not want to say, ALL HOSTING is shared hosting, so paying more for something "not shared" is basically a rip off. Thanks for the interview Rino. Good stuff
Great interview! - I am in the process of setting up my freelance business as a web designer and I have already signed up for Hostinger but was wondering if I had made the right decision. This interview has given me a newfound confidence in my choice. Thank you!
Used Hostinger since beginning of my online journey, they are the best! Customer service is impeccable! Service is amazing! After watching this video I like them even more!
Thank you for this video Rino! And to anyone that bothers to read this comment - what you are taught in business school is the antithesis of what this guy says at the 2:40 timestamp in this video. Clearly, success in business derives from repeat customers and referral business. Scalability is inevitable where value is always greater than the cost of your product or service. Hostinger is doing things the right way. I can not wait to see what Siteground has to say on this topic. Keep them coming Rino! Highly useful content!
Great interview! Hostinger just came on my radar, because I have been helping some people in Brazil make a website. My normal recommendations are simply not affordable there. My guess was that Hostinger was trying to provide a great service at a low cost so that it can be affordable globally. This seems to be true! So cool. Thanks for sharing this!
I am with Hostinger for four years now and haven't had a single reason to complain. They never broke their promises, always delivered, and sometimes even overdelivered, in my case as many lifetime ssl certificates as I want. If Hostinger doesn't file for divorce, we'll be a couple for life.
I have sites with WPMUDEV and I just spun up a site on Hostinger a month ago. I see better page load times with litespeed/Cloud flare/Quic cloud than I do with the WPMUDEV platform. May end up making the switch for those sites as well.
@@rinodeboer well he never really answered the question about the difference between shared, cloud, vps - he basically said they're all the same? I'd like to know more about the specs of the hard drives, are they SSD or NVMe? What processors? Intel high frequency or 10 year old Xeons. The answers were quite fluffy and about customers rather than the hardware differences. Maybe you could do a video showing page speed tests between Hostinger cloud/Siteground etc? BTW; Great content recently Rino - nice to see someone else enjoying the "page builder war" 😂👍
Hostinger isn't cheap. It's affordable if you don't want to spend about 1 hour to set up a Plesk/Gridpane server on a Hetzner VPS. Hostinger is all about coupon codes and losing money every year to get as many customers as possible and dominate the "noob" WordPress hosting market.
Is it normal for people to change hosting companies when their first year at a cheap price is coming to and end? Can they come back after a certain time has passed and still get it at a cheap price? or do hosting companies keep a log of all their previous customers? If so, what kind of info do they track? Credict Card info? domain name?
Well, many people obviously switch when they aren’t happy. But I don’t think its usual to switch after your first year. And the discounts for the first year depends per company. Hostingers biggest discount comes for 4 years, Siteground always promotes their 1 year discount. And you can always create a new account and use the coupon again. But that’s not what most people do because then you have to transfer everything to the new account. So my suggestion is: do good research, and then just make a decision for a few years and get yourself a good price on it.
I’ve been w Hostinger for about 3 years where I have 70-80 of my WP demo sites and I’ve been very happy w them, amazing prices, quick chat support and really never any issues or downtime w any of my sites #winWIN