Performance Hosting Japan - Why your website deserves proper hosting
So when we see a rich and engaging site, we recommend the investment in a good hosting plan, else each visit you could argue is taking value away from the original money you paid for the thing being built.
If you are building a company level website, allocate budget for a solid web hosting service, preferably not shared, and get away from anything sold on the basis of it being cheap! That means it will be slow, break regularly and the support people are unlikely to be overly prompt in getting back to you.
I'm not going to recommend here any hosting companies or slate others. Simply state that it is worth every extra yen to get decent higher level hosting. And even if you figure out the cost of decent hosting over 5 years, it will be tiny against the allocation for design and system build.
Another facet of hosting performance in this article is location (in this case Japan). You want to host your website where you audience are. A lot of the 'deals' available are in the US, and in some cases they can be very good. However you need to offset the performance you gain (for your budget --- avoid basing it on being cheap) from the distance to your audience. We've seen websites gain an entire second in speed by being local, and that is for each element loaded on the page. Subsequently a weaker host in Japan will be much quicker than an overseas host. So if your expected visitors coming from Japan, seriously consider the gains of choosing a host whose services are 100% definitely in Japan.
Now the big boys will use a CDN to deliver their site from different locations depending on the visitor but for most projects companies don't go that far --- if they were considering CDNs they don't need our advice. So hosting needs to be considered in the overall project plan for a new website. If you are building something new, big and beautiful you want a 5 lane highway leading straight to it with high-speed elevators to every floor in your building. Nothing ever breaks because you've got backup electricity generators running and the maintenance guy lives next door. That way everyone who visits gets to see and experience everything you had made in its full glory, as opposed to something beautiful never really living up to its potential.