4 steps to creating your own website!

in #money8 years ago

Having your own blog or website is one of the best kept secrets of impressing a potential employer. STS founder, Owen, shows you how to set one up for yourself.


I have been a website developer for over and I go through the process of setting up websites all the time. With this experience I have been able to learn the best methods and source the best prices out there.


Today setting up your online pad is as easy and as affordable as ever. If you follow my own dead easy simple steps you can be up and running easily within 30 minutes for less than £30.


I have gone through the steps below with many graduate friends, and they have all benefited from an employer’s raised eyebrows when applying for jobs. Most of the sites don’t even have much on them, the domain name or email address alone can be enough to impress.


Aside from actually landing a great job, setting up your own website will be the best thing you have done for a long time.


So here’s the key to the best kept secret most students and graduates have not even thought of…


 The core ingredients you will need are a domain name (ie. myname.co.uk), an email address (easy to set up with your domain name registrar), a website host (someone who stores your website’s files on a server) and optionally a free platform called WordPress (helps you manage your website without having to know any HTML etc).  

  1. Choosing and registering a domain name
    As you probably know there are a range of domain name extensions  available. The most common for the UK are .com and .co.uk. It’s your  choice which you go for, assuming that the domain name you want is still  available. .com domain name
    Cheapest Registrar: GoDaddy.com
    Price: ~£7.35 per year
    Notes: Select GBP from top right to pay in £ .co.uk domain name
    Cheapest Registrar: 123-Reg.co.uk
    Price: ~£2.99 per year
    Notes: Minimum 2 years, exc. VAT
  2. Setting up your personalised email address
    The easiest way to create your email address under your new domain name is to do it with your registrar from step 1. Once you login there will be an option to set up email addresses  which you can then hook up with your usual email client (eg. Hotmail,  GMail, Outlook). There are loads of guides out there on doing this, so I’ll leave this to Google for now.
  3. Website hosting
    To upload content onto your domain name you will need a bit of server  space (just like storing files on your computer). There are hundreds of  web hosts out there now, and you could spend forever looking. The host I go with for most of my websites is GoDaddy to keep things simple (and cheap!) but most domain registrars (such as 123-reg) now offer hosting too. Top website host: GoDaddy Price: From £2.99 per month You will then just need to point your domain name to the server by  setting the “Nameservers”, which will be provided by your web host. If  you need any help in getting things sorted, never hesitate to get in  touch with the hosts as their support teams are usually very good.
  4. Installing WordPress
    Technically  your online presence is secured, but if anyone goes to www.yoursite.com  there won’t be much to see! The quickest way to get something on the  site is to install the incredibly popular and free piece of kit called  WordPress. If you have gone with GoDaddy they have a very simple system in place which allows you to install WordPress through them. Otherwise it is a case of downloading WordPress, unzipping the files and uploading it to your server via a FTP client (I use FileZilla). Again, there’s loads of stuff on this process, WordPress Docs are a great start.

 Once you’ve set up your site there’s a whole world of opportunities to  grow your website and even make some money from it. In the coming weeks I  will be working on guides teaching you how to apply themes to your  WordPress site and how to go about monetising what you’re doing online.