That’s been happening, at least from my own memory, since at least the mid-2000s.
> plus consumer interest in "a website" has declined sharply now that small businesses just feel that they need an instagram to get started.
Ah yes, the 2020s version of “just start a Facebook page.” The more things change, the more they stay the same I suppose.
> Combine that with site builders eating at shared hosting's market share
I remember hearing that for the first time in I wanna say...2006? It sure did cause a panic for at least a little while.
> and it's not looking good for the future of the "old school" shared hosting industry that you are thinking of.
Yes, I've heard this one more times than I can count too.
The funny thing is, I’ve been hearing this same “shared hosting is dying” narrative for nearly two decades now. Yet, in that time, I’ve seen multiple companies launch, thrive, and sell for multi-million dollar exits.
But sure, this time it’s definitely the death knell. Meanwhile, I assure you, the bigger players in the space are still making money hand over fist.
https://www.mordorintelligence.com/industry-reports/web-host...
> By hosting type, shared hosting led with 37.5% of the web hosting market share in 2024