A service-level agreement (SLA) is a written promise between you and a provider that spells out what service you will get, how it will be measured, and what happens if the provider misses the target.
Think of an SLA as the part of a contract that turns fuzzy expectations into measurable commitments. For a website host, that usually means uptime, support response times, backup rules, and maintenance windows. For a marketing or software vendor, it can include deliverables, turnaround times, reporting cadence, and escalation steps. The whole point is fewer surprises and fewer arguments because both sides are working from the same scoreboard.
If you run a business in Orlando or anywhere in Florida, SLAs matter even more during storm season. A solid SLA will clearly say what counts as “down,” how downtime is calculated, whether scheduled maintenance is excluded, and how disasters or regional outages are handled. If your phone stops ringing because your site is offline, you want clarity before it happens, not after.
| Common SLA item | What it means in plain English | What you should look for |
|---|---|---|
| Availability (uptime %) | How often the service should be reachable | A specific percentage, how it is measured, and what is excluded (maintenance, third party outages) |
| Support response time | How fast someone replies after you open a ticket | Separate targets by severity (site down vs minor issue), plus support hours and channels |
| Resolution target | How fast the issue should be fixed or a workaround provided | Clear definitions for “resolved,” plus an escalation path if it drags on |
| Backups | How often backups happen and how long they are kept | Backup frequency, retention, and whether restores are included or billed |
| RPO / RTO | How much data you might lose (RPO) and how fast service returns (RTO) | Numbers that match your risk tolerance, especially for booking, payments, or patient intake |
| Service credits | Discounts if the provider misses the SLA | How credits are calculated, how you claim them, and deadlines for submitting a claim |
| Customer responsibilities | What you must do so the SLA applies | Access rules, timely approvals, keeping plugins updated, allowed configurations |
Two practical realities: first, many SLAs come with carve-outs, so read the definitions. “Uptime” might exclude DNS issues, plugin conflicts, or upstream platform outages. Second, service credits often reduce your bill a little, but they do not repay lost revenue, so treat the SLA as risk management, not insurance.
When we set up or migrate sites, we like SLAs that match how you actually run the business, especially for hosting, backups, and security updates, which is why our WordPress hosting service conversations always include uptime and support expectations in plain language.
If you are comparing vendors, ask for the measurement method and a sample monthly report. The reporting detail matters because it shows what you will be able to prove later. If you are diagnosing performance problems that feel like “downtime” to customers, start with what causes websites to load slowly so you can separate hosting limits from front-end issues.
For business sites that handle leads, forms, or appointments, your SLA should also cover updates and ownership boundaries. If a redesign or rebuild is involved, we set these boundaries during scope so there is no confusion between design work and ongoing support, which is part of how our web design work stays predictable.
One last check: an SLA is only as useful as its definitions. If your business depends on secure connections for forms or logins, tighten up language around certificates, renewals, and monitoring, and pair it with the basics in does HTTPS affect SEO so your technical setup supports both trust and visibility.