1. Where it started — the birth of SparkShift
In early 2024 I launched SparkShift with a small, hungry team and a simple goal: offer reliable, affordable hosting with clean support and honest policies. We learned fast, iterated on our stack, and built relationships with early customers. SparkShift was a learning journey — full of wins and a few mistakes, but it was mine, and I’m proud of what we built from nothing.
2. Why I decided to sell
Running and growing a hosting company is intense — technical debt, operational demands, and the need for larger-scale investment. After evaluating long-term options, I made the difficult but necessary decision to pass SparkShift to a team that could take it further. On 6 November 2024 in Surat, I legally sold SparkShift to IntroNexus Web Services. From that day onward, they became the legal and operational owners of sparkshift.host.
3. Why some sites still show my name
After a business changes hands, it can take time for all external listings — review platforms, directories, and third-party sites — to update. Some sites update automatically, others rely on manual corrections. If my name still appears on review pages or directories for SparkShift, that is a third-party update issue — either an oversight, a cached entry, or a site that hasn’t processed the ownership change. I don’t control those sites, but I want to be clear: I’m no longer connected to SparkShift.
4. Rest, reflection, and a fresh start
After the sale I took months to rest, reflect, and carefully plan my next move. I took stock of what worked at SparkShift and what didn’t — the technical mistakes we made, the support gaps, and the growth choices that could have been better. Instead of repeating those issues, I used them as a checklist for the next project.
5. Enter DotShift — bigger, stronger, and wiser
On 5 February 2025 I launched DotShift.net. This time the brand started with the advantage of lessons learned. We built DotShift to be more scalable, more secure, and more customer-focused than our early SparkShift days. We implemented better processes, clearer policies, and a stronger technical stack so customers get faster, more reliable hosting and better support.
6. Key lessons I carried forward
- Plan for scale: Design infrastructure with growth in mind so performance doesn't suffer as you add customers.
- Documentation & automation: Automate repeat tasks and document processes so your team can move faster without breaking things.
- Customer-first communication: Clear policies and transparent support prevent many avoidable issues.
- Own your mistakes: We learned faster by admitting where we went wrong and fixing it quickly.
7. What this means for customers and partners
If you see my name listed as owner of SparkShift anywhere, please consider that information outdated. For questions about current SparkShift operations, billing, or support — contact the team at IntroNexus Web Services (the official owners since 6 November 2024). For anything related to DotShift, I’m here and actively involved in the new company.
Quick facts
- SparkShift sale date: 6 November 2024 — sold in Surat to IntroNexus Web Services (legal transfer completed).
- DotShift launch: 5 February 2025 — fresh company, new leadership, improved tech & policies.
- Status: I am no longer part of SparkShift; I am the founder of DotShift.
8. A personal note
Starting, scaling, and selling a business changes you. The sale of SparkShift allowed me to learn and re-enter the market with clearer priorities. DotShift is the direct result of those lessons — a service shaped by experience and a sincere desire to do better for customers. Thank you to everyone who supported me through both journeys.
If you’re a directory or review site owner reading this and need official confirmation of ownership change, I can provide documentation on request. For DotShift business or partnership inquiries, please use the contact details on our official site.