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Whats the most easiest and best billing management to handle?
I dont care if i have to pay?
whats the best one?
(i use cpanel with whm)If you use WHM / CPanel, and you offer hosting, you want WHMCS (<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.whmcs.com">http://www.whmcs.com</a><!-- m -->). They can be a bit slow with 'urgent' support at times, and the forums are completely censored, so I wouldn't trust anything there, but the product itself is great.WHMCS rocks!Ubersmith for us!I've used WHM.AutoPilot (<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.whmautopilot.com/">http://www.whmautopilot.com/</a><!-- m -->). My experience with it wasn't great; it seemed too clunky.Another vote for WHMCS - awesome. A complete solution WHMCS would be best for the billing part with Cpanel.We LOVE WHMCS. It has really helped streamline our operation.AWBS rocks for us. Not as easy as WHMCS but way ahead.WHMCS is the bestWhats the most easiest and best billing management to handle?
I dont care if i have to pay?
whats the best one?
(i use cpanel with whm)
Try doing a search and i'm 120% sure you will find results.ClientExec I love.Nice..thanks for letting me know WHMCS..sounds too awesome!WHMCS I Love to death!i suggest a custom made billing software with needed features. I made my own billing system in cakephp + xajax.Clientexe is Good and cheaper Than WHMCSHm... I have only ever heard of WHMCS.Which comes free with most plans...I suppose I will check out Clientexei suggest a custom made billing software with needed features. I made my own billing system in cakephp + xajax.
Many larger hosting operations find that eventually they need to build their own billing solution but for small startups this suggestion is rarely practical or cost-/time-effective.
WHMCS works fine for me as well and is far cheaper initially and probably at least for the first few years of business as one scales up. And there are "industrial strength" solutions like Ubersmith that can accommodate bigger hosting operations too.
It's not a bad suggestion, mind you, just almost never practical and will generally impede the startup of a hosting company who is spending a lot of time building and troubleshooting their own application.
I dont care if i have to pay?
whats the best one?
(i use cpanel with whm)If you use WHM / CPanel, and you offer hosting, you want WHMCS (<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.whmcs.com">http://www.whmcs.com</a><!-- m -->). They can be a bit slow with 'urgent' support at times, and the forums are completely censored, so I wouldn't trust anything there, but the product itself is great.WHMCS rocks!Ubersmith for us!I've used WHM.AutoPilot (<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://www.whmautopilot.com/">http://www.whmautopilot.com/</a><!-- m -->). My experience with it wasn't great; it seemed too clunky.Another vote for WHMCS - awesome. A complete solution WHMCS would be best for the billing part with Cpanel.We LOVE WHMCS. It has really helped streamline our operation.AWBS rocks for us. Not as easy as WHMCS but way ahead.WHMCS is the bestWhats the most easiest and best billing management to handle?
I dont care if i have to pay?
whats the best one?
(i use cpanel with whm)
Try doing a search and i'm 120% sure you will find results.ClientExec I love.Nice..thanks for letting me know WHMCS..sounds too awesome!WHMCS I Love to death!i suggest a custom made billing software with needed features. I made my own billing system in cakephp + xajax.Clientexe is Good and cheaper Than WHMCSHm... I have only ever heard of WHMCS.Which comes free with most plans...I suppose I will check out Clientexei suggest a custom made billing software with needed features. I made my own billing system in cakephp + xajax.
Many larger hosting operations find that eventually they need to build their own billing solution but for small startups this suggestion is rarely practical or cost-/time-effective.
WHMCS works fine for me as well and is far cheaper initially and probably at least for the first few years of business as one scales up. And there are "industrial strength" solutions like Ubersmith that can accommodate bigger hosting operations too.
It's not a bad suggestion, mind you, just almost never practical and will generally impede the startup of a hosting company who is spending a lot of time building and troubleshooting their own application.