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Why Bloggers Switch to BlueHost and WordPress -Blue Host

We switched to BlueHost for the following 3 reasons: BlueHost offered a free domain name for life when you signed up for their web hosting package ($6.95/month). BlueHost offered free domain privacy registration. You can have an unlimited number of domains hosted on your BlueHost account. This was important to us because that way we could experiment with a lot of different blogs and each blog would have a different domain name.Finally, you can create install WordPress on your blog with the click of a button. If you run a blog on WordPress.com, you can't do anything. But if you install the free WordPress software from WordPress.org on your blog, you can run ads, make money from your blogs, and install all of the features (plugins) that you want. BlueHost let us install as many WordPress blogs as we want on our BlueHost account with the click of a button.

In the beginning... we were broke. We wanted to blog, but we didn't want to pay for anything. So we signed up for a free blogger account. Ten months later, we decided to get more serious and we switched to a self-hosted WordPress blog powered by BlueHost.Here are the 3 big problems we had with free blogs: You have that navigation bar at the top that often comes with free blogs. For example, Blogger and Xanga both do this. It helps users to find other Blogger or Xanga blogs, but does it really present the professional look that you're going for?Your free blog only has a few basic features. For example, WordPress offers a free platform, but you can't install any of the plugins to add extra features like top-commentator plugins, polls, survey, etc.
LiveJournal offers a free platform, but their basic accounts only have a few of their features turned on.
If you want more services, you can get a plus account, but then you agree to let LiveJournal run their ads on your blog. If you want to turn their ads off, or buy your own domain name to use with your blog, then you need to have a paid account ($3 per month).
You're not allowed to make money with your free blog. Lots of people blog because it's fun. But, we also try to see if we can make a little money on the side. After all, there are lots of ways to make money through blogging: google ads, affiliate links, sponsored posts.
The only problem is that a lot of the free blogging platforms specifically say that you can't run those things. For example, the free WordPress.com platform doesn't allow you to run ads on your site. Same with Xanga.
The big exception to this is Blogger. Blogger is owned by Google and they make it easy to run Google Ads on your blog. But, even then, companies like PayPerPost that pay your to write sponsored posts will often reject your blog if you are running a free account at typepad, xanga, blogspot, livejournal, wordpress.com, or vox.

Right now, we run over ten WordPress blogs on our one BlueHost account. All of our blogs have their own domain names. We also have an unlimited number of email addresses ending with our domain name. And, we are in full control of the look and feel of our blogs.

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