You finally publish the post you have been sitting on for two weeks. Then the site loads slowly, or it is down entirely, and nobody waits around to see what you wrote. The discipline of writing did not fail that day. The infrastructure underneath it did.
Continuity, the second pillar of The Method, depends on a foundation that holds when you actually show up. Hosting is rarely the exciting part of building something, which is exactly why it gets ignored until the moment it fails in public.
What Bluehost actually changes
Bluehost is one of the longest-running hosting providers built specifically around WordPress, and for years it was the platform officially recommended for beginners setting up their first WordPress site. The appeal for someone starting out is straightforward: a free domain for the first year, a one-click WordPress install, and a control panel that does not require any server knowledge to use.
For a first website, a small business site, or a blog still finding its audience, that simplicity matters more than any advanced feature. The goal at that stage is not maximum performance. It is removing every technical excuse that could keep the site from existing at all.
The honest part: it has real limits
Bluehost’s entry-level shared hosting plans are not built for high-traffic sites, and pretending otherwise would not serve anyone. Shared hosting means sharing server resources with other sites, and as traffic grows, that shared environment becomes the bottleneck. This is normal, expected, and the same is true of most hosting providers at this price point, not a flaw unique to Bluehost.
Three things tend to separate a smooth hosting experience from a frustrating one:
- Match the plan to where the site is now, not to where you hope it will be in a year.
- Set up regular backups from day one, through a plugin or the host’s own backup tool, before you need them.
- Plan to move to a higher tier or a different provider once traffic actually outgrows shared hosting, not before.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
Continuity is not about having the most powerful setup available. It is about removing the obstacles that would otherwise stop you from publishing on the day you actually have something to publish. For a first site, or a small project still proving itself, Bluehost removes enough of the technical friction that the only thing left to be consistent about is the work itself.
The best hosting is the one you never have to think about, which is precisely the point.
Frequently asked questions
Is Bluehost good for a first website?
Yes. Its setup process and WordPress integration are built specifically for people who have never managed hosting before.
Does Bluehost work well with WordPress?
Yes. Bluehost has historically focused on WordPress hosting specifically, including one-click installs and WordPress-specific support.



