How
to Change Hosts Without Losing Emails
When you change hosts you must make a change to your domain name
to point to your new host's name servers. While it's any easy step
generally, it does create a frustrating period of time called "propagation".
Propagation is the time it takes from when you make a change to
your domain name until the time it takes for the whole world to
see the change. This time usually spans anywhere from 24 to 72 hours.
Why? Well, really simply put - when you made that
change, the place you made the change at must tell thousands of
other servers around the world that the change has been made. Some
servers request change information every 12 hours, some not but
every few days. So - DNS servers use sort of a "virtual word-of-mouth"
to update one another, and it simply takes a day or so for the news
to spread. Is that basic enough for you?
During propagation there is a chance your emails
will go to your old host, or they may go to their new host, depending
on whether or not the sender's ISP's DNS is updated or not. You
can't afford to lose emails or even risk delayed replies, so what
do you do? Actually, it's quite easy.
Step 1. Setup Email Accounts With New Host
Go ahead and activate your new web hosting
plan, if you have not already. For this example, let's assume
you use the address sales@yourdomain.com as your email address.
Create a new email account on your new hosting account called sales@,
just like your old host.
Step 2: In Outlook Change Your Current Sales@
POP
In Outlook (or whatever your email application is) click to edit
the properties of your sales@ account. Most likely your POP and
SMTP settings are mail.yourdomain.com. Change your POP settings
to the IP address of your old hosting account. Don't
know that IP address? Just ping it.
Step 3: Create a New Duplicate Account In
Outlook
In Outlook (or whatever program) create a new email account - this
will basically be a duplicate of your current sales@ account. Feel
free to go ahead and set your SMTP server still as mail.yourdomain.com
but set your POP to the IP address of your new hosting account.
If you are using D2DWebHosting you can find this IP address in your
welcome email.
Step 4: Just Check Both Accounts for a Few
Days
That's it - you now have 2 sales@ accounts, one that checks your
old hosting account and one that checks your new account. When you
click "Send / Receive" both account will automatically
be checked. You should only have to do this for a few days after
you initiate your domain name change and then can delete the sales@
account that checks the old host.
Step 5. Cancel Your Old Host
You may now cancel that old hosting account.
Return
to Hosting Guide
|