Tuesday, October 27, 2020

How to Add Email Subscriptions to Your WordPress Blog

Do you want to make it easy for readers to subscribe to your WordPress blog?

Many businesses miss out on the benefits of having a direct connection with their audience through email. By having people subscribe to your email list, you can increase traffic, make more sales, and build a relationship with your audience.

In this article, we’ll show you how to add email subscriptions to your WordPress blog and start building your email list.

Adding email subscription to your WordPress blog

Why Should You Add Subscribe via Email Option to Your Site?

While social media is one way to connect with your audience, email is still the most reliable form of communication.

It gives you a direct connection to your readers because you can email subscribers whenever you want. Plus, you have control over email, whereas you have very little control over social media platforms.

For instance, you could post on Facebook or Instagram to thousands of followers, but only a portion of them may see your content due to algorithms that determine your reach.

For more on this topic, see our article on why you should start building your email list (right away).

You might think it’s difficult to add an email subscription option to your website, but it’s not.

With all of the email marketing software available today, it’s become quite easy, and you can get started in just a few clicks.

Since there are dozens of email software to choose from, we’re going to share with you a few solutions we believe work best.

How to Add Email Subscription to Your WordPress Site

First, you’re going to need an email marketing service.

We recommend using Constant Contact because it is the most beginner friendly email marketing service for small businesses.

Constant Contact email marketing software

It comes with built-in tools to see your email performance, such as email opens and click rates. These tools can help you make decisions over time that improve your email campaigns and grow your business.

Their Email Plus option comes with features such as:

  • Automations
  • Surveys
  • Polls
  • Coupons
  • Online donations
  • A/B subject line testing

Constant Contact also works well with other tools like WordPress form plugins, so you can use it to grow your business. You’ll see a few of them, and how they can be used later in this article.

Some alternatives to Constant Contact are SendinBlue, ConvertKit, and MailerLite. All work similarly and have slightly different features.

For now, we’ll show you how to add an email subscription option in WordPress using Constant Contact. You can still follow along even if you’re using another email service as they all share similar concepts.

Creating Your Email Subscription List

The first thing you need to do is sign up for Constant Contact. Simply go to their home page, click on ‘sign up for free’, and fill out your information.

Once you’ve created your account, it’s time to set up your email list.

An email list is simply the list of email addresses that your users will provide when they sign up for your email subscription.

First, you need to click on the ‘Contacts’ button at the top of your Constant Contact dashboard.

Contacts link in Constant Contact

This will take you to the contacts page. From there, you need to click on the blue ‘Create List’ button.

Create Contact Constant list

You’ll be asked to provide a name for your email list. It can be whatever you want, but we’ll call it ‘My Newsletter’ for this example.

Create Constant Contact list name

And that’s it. Now you have a new list people can subscribe to.

The next step is to add an email subscription form to your WordPress website where your website visitors can sign up.

Adding Email Subscription Form in WordPress

Constant Contact comes with an email signup form builder, but the easiest way to get started is by using the WPForms plugin. It integrates seamlessly with Constant Contact to set up an optin form easily.

WPForms also has a limited free version called WPForms Lite. It also allows you to connect your forms to Constant Contact.

First, you need to install and activate the WPForms plugin. If you need help, then follow our guide on how to install a plugin for detailed instructions.

Upon activation, you need to visit WPForms » Add New page and then select the ‘Newsletter Signup Form’ template.

Add new WPForm

On the next page, you’ll get a prompt to set up your email marketing service in the marketing tab. We’ll get to that in a moment.

WPForms will now load a sample newsletter sign up with the form builder interface. It will include first and last name and email address fields to the form.

Newsletter signup form fields

You can change the form fields if you want. For instance, you can add a full name and email address field. You can click on a form field to change its title or move them up and down.

Once you are satisfied with the signup form, click on the big orange ‘SAVE’ button at the top.

Now, it’s time to set up your confirmation message. This is what your users will see when they submit the form.

Simply, switch to the ‘Settings’ tab and then click on the ‘Confirmation’ section.

Confirmation message

By default, WPForms will show a confirmation message which you can change to anything you want. You can also change the confirmation type and redirect users to any page or URL.

Now that your newsletter sign up form is ready. Let’s connect it to Constant Contact.

Simply click on the ‘Marketing’ tab and select ‘Constant Contact’.

Connect your Constant Contact account

Next, click on the ‘Add New Connection’ button and you’ll see a popup that asks you to name your connection. We called ours ‘My Newsletter Form’ but you can name it whatever you want.

After that, click on the ‘Click here to register with Constant Contact’ link.

Register Constant Contact with WPForms

It will open a popup where you will be asked to allow WPForms to connect with your Constant Contact account.

Allow WPForms to connect with Constant Contact

Click on the ‘Allow’ button to continue.

You’ll be given a long authorization code to register your form.

WPForm authorization code

Copy and paste the authorization code in WPForms settings and provide an account nickname. The ‘Account nickname’ could be anything you want.

Finally, click on the connect button to continue.

On the next screen, you’ll be able to select the fields you want to pass through from your form to Constant Contact.

We selected ‘email’ and ‘full name’ but you can select as many as you want. Just be sure that those two fields are included in your newsletter sign up form fields.

WPForm email fields

Click the big orange ‘Save’ button when you’re done.

Now that we have the form set up, we want to place it on our WordPress website. For this example, we’re going to place it in our sidebar. But the form can go on any page you want.

Go to Appearance » Widgets page and add the WPForm widget to your sidebar.

Put a Constant Contact form in your sidebar

Provide a title for your widget and then select your newsletter sign up form. Don’t forget to click on the save button to store your widget settings.

You can now visit your website to see your email subscription form in action.

Constant Contact form in sidebar

You now have an email subscription box in your sidebar. And whenever someone fills out their name and email, they get subscribed to your newsletter.

Now that everything is set up, let’s take a look at how to send emails to your subscribers.

How to Write and Send Emails to Your Blog Subscribers

There are a few ways people can get your updates, and that’s through regular emails or an RSS feed.

The RSS feed method automatically sends users an email whenever you publish a new blog post. However, it is less effective, has very low open rates, and users get annoyed when they receive too many emails.

We recommend writing your emails manually. This allows you to make your emails more personalized and conversational, add any content you want, and choose your own frequency.

Most popular bloggers send an email newsletter once a week. You can set your own frequency and schedule the emails ahead of time, so that your users get them on the same day and time every week.

We’ll now walk you through writing your first email and sending it to your subscribers.

First, go to the ‘Campaigns’ page in your Constant Contact account dashboard and then click the ‘Create’ button.

Create email in Constant Contact

You’ll then select ‘Email’ under ‘Choose a campaign.’

Select email in Constant Contact

Next, you’ll need to name your newsletter. This is for organization and you can change it later if you want.

Name your newsletter

After you click on ‘Open in editor,’ you’ll see the option to choose a template. We’ve chosen the Basic Newsletter template for this example, but you can pick anything you want.

On the next page, you’ll be able to edit, add to, or remove any of the elements you see. Here’s what ours looks like as an example:

Example newsletter

At the top, you’ll see the subject and preheader. To change this, you just click that area and add whatever you want.

On the left side, you’ll see a handful of options you can drag directly into your newsletter template. You can add text, buttons, images, and more.

In this example, we added a few photos, some text, and some links. To add a link to your newsletter, you can highlight any text you want.

Insert link into email

Click the chain link icon, and then paste the link to your blog post, like this:

Paste link into text

Click ‘Insert’ and you’re ready to go. Now, for the last step, click ‘Continue’ in the upper right corner and you’ll see the following:

Send your email

Make sure you check the box next to your list (My Newsletter), and then hit the ‘Send Now’ button at the top.

And that’s how you send your very first email manually. Also, if you want to schedule it for later, you can choose that option and set a date for it to send.

You can repeat this process at any time you want to notify your subscribers about anything new on your blog.

How to Get More Email Subscribers

Did you know that more than 70% people visiting your website will simply never see it again? This why you have added an email subscription option to your blog so that you can notify users about new content, offers, and services.

However, adding just one sign up form in your sidebar is not enough. You’ll need to find more ways to quickly get more email subscribers.

This is where OptinMonster comes in. It is the best conversion optimization software in the world and helps you convert more website visitors into subscribers.

Instead of embedding a form in your sidebar that probably won’t get noticed, you can create opt-in forms that convert well and have been tested on thousands of sites.

With OptinMonster, You’ll get floating header and footer bars, slide-in boxes, welcome mats, inline forms, and lightbox popups.

Select campaign type

Next, you need to choose a campaign template that you can further customize to your liking:

Select campaign template

For instance, you can set up a popup on your site that triggers when someone is about to hit the back button in their browser. This is known as an exit-intent popup.

So right before someone leaves your site, they get a chance to subscribe, and many do because this has been tested on thousands of sites.

Lightbox popup

What’s great is OptinMonster integrates perfectly with any email marketing software and all types of websites. For more tips check out these tested and easy ways to grow your email list faster.

We hope this article shows you how to add email subscriptions to your WordPress blog. You may also want to read our guide on how to get a free business email address for your blog, and how to get a free virtual business phone number for your blog.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post How to Add Email Subscriptions to Your WordPress Blog appeared first on WPBeginner.


October 27, 2020 at 04:00PM

Monday, October 26, 2020

How to Easily Add Interactive 360 Degree Images in WordPress

Do you want to add interactive 360 degree images to your WordPress site?

Interactive 360 degree images can be used to create virtual tours or allow users to interact with product images with multiple angles.

In this article, we’ll show you how to easily add interactive 360 degree images in WordPress.

Adding interactive 360 degree images in WordPress

Why Use Interactive 360 Degree Images in WordPress?

There are lots of reasons to use 360 degree images on your WordPress website.

You can use 360 degree photo to show products from all angles on your online store.

Or perhaps you have a real estate website and you want to offer virtual tours using interactive 360 degree images.

Tip: Need to create a 360 degree image? There are plenty of smartphone apps that let you do this.

The problem is that by default WordPress does not show 360 degree images. However, you can still add them using plugins.

That being said, let’s take a look at how to easily add 360 degree interactive images to your website.

Using the Algori 360 Image Plugin for WordPress

The easiest way to add 360 degree rotating images to WordPress is to use the Algori 360 Image plugin. This is a free plugin that supports VR (virtual reality).

Algori 360 adds a new block to the block editor. You simply upload your 3D image to this block.

Note: You can’t use this plugin with the classic editor. Also, you can only add one 360 degree image per page.

First, you need to install and activate the Algori 360 plugin. For more details, see our step by step guide on how to install a WordPress plugin.

Upon activation, simply edit any existing post or page or create a new one.

On the post edit screen, click on the (+) add new block button and then add the 360° Image block.

Adding a 360 degree image block

Now, it’s time to upload your 360 Image into the block settings.

Just drag your image into the block or click the Upload button to find it on your computer. You can also choose an image that’s already in your media library.

Uploading a 360 degree image into WordPress

It may take a few minutes for your image to upload and process. You will see a spinning loading circle while it’s doing so. Just wait for the image to appear in the WordPress block editor.

The 360 degree image has now uploaded and processed

After that, you can go ahead and publish your post to see the 360° image live on your site. If you’re not ready to publish the post, you can preview it instead.

Publishing your WordPress page

You can drag the image to rotate it. Here’s how it looks on our demo website.

The virtual tour in action on our demo website

If you have a VR headset, then you can even click the VR button to view the image in virtual reality.

Alternative Interactive 360 Degree Images Plugins to Try

If you want more features or something a bit different from Algori 360 Image, then you can also try one of these other WordPress plugins:

We hope this article helped you learn how to add interactive 360 degree images in WordPress. You may also want to read our article on how to get a virtual business phone number for free, and our list of the must have WordPress plugins for all websites.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post How to Easily Add Interactive 360 Degree Images in WordPress appeared first on WPBeginner.


October 26, 2020 at 04:36PM

Friday, October 23, 2020

9 Best WordPress Facebook Plugins to Grow Your Blog

Are you looking for the best Facebook plugins for WordPress?

Facebook is the world’s largest social media platform with more than 2 billion monthly active users. That’s why there are many WordPress Facebook plugins that can help you maximize your online presence.

In this article, we have hand-picked the best WordPress Facebook plugins to grow your website and get more traffic.

Best Facebook plugins for WordPress

Editor’s Note: If you’re looking for chatbot or messenger bot plugins, then please see our list of the best chatbot software for small businesses.

1. Smash Balloon Custom Facebook Feed Pro

Smash Balloon Custom Facebook Feed Pro

Smash Balloon Custom Facebook Feed Pro is the best Facebook plugin for WordPress. It lets you connect your WordPress site to your Facebook account with the click of a button.

With Custom Facebook Feed Pro, you can easily add your Facebook posts to any WordPress post, page, or sidebar. It comes with multiple layout choices with easy to use styling options.

You can take full control of your feed. You can choose to hide things like comments, likes, reactions, and shares.

It supports multiple feeds, so you can use them in different areas of your site. This plugin works with both Facebook pages and groups and helps you drive more engagement towards your Facebook community.

You can also use it to display your Facebook user reviews, embed your Facebook photo albums, create a carousel, and more.

Note: There’s also a free Facebook Feed plugin by Smash Ballon with limited features that you can use.

2. RafflePress

RafflePress

RafflePress is the best contest and giveaways plugin for WordPress. It lets you easily run a contest where people need to take specific actions to enter.

Contests are one of the fastest ways to get a ton of likes and engagement for your Facebook page. RafflePress comes with a built-in giveaway template for growing your Facebook page.

To enter your contest, people will need to visit your page on Facebook and/or view one of your posts or videos.

It comes with a drag and drop contest builder where you can simply add actions and assign them different numbers of entries into the contest.

You can also use it with other popular social media platforms like Twitter and Instagram, or run giveaways to grow your email list.

RafflePress lets you easily draw a winner, too. In fact, you even get a link to email the winner from inside the app itself.

3. Shared Counts

Shared Counts

Shared Counts is one of the best social media plugins for WordPress. It allows you to easily add social sharing buttons to your WordPress posts. This includes buttons for Facebook, Pinterest, Twitter, LinkedIn, and more.

It is highly optimized for speed and performance and can accurately show shares count for different social sites. It even comes with multiple button styles. This means you can choose the style that looks best on your site.

4. Pixel Cat – Conversion Pixel Manager

Pixel Cat – Conversion Pixel Manager

Pixel Cat – Conversion Pixel Manager allows you to add Facebook retargeting pixel to your WordPress site. This pixel allows you to show customized ads to Facebook users who have visited your website.

Pixel Cat also helps you track WooCommerce customers and show them better ads in their Facebook feed.

There’s also a Pro version that gives you extra power and flexibility.

5. Social Reviews and Recommendations

Social Reviews and Recommendations

Social Reviews and Recommendations lets you display Facebook page reviews on your WordPress website. It comes with an easy to use widget that allows you to connect your website to your Facebook page and display Facebook users’ reviews.

This helps you add social proof to your website and build trust in your brand. The free version works fine, but you will need to pay for the ‘Business’ version to display reviews in the Schema.org rich snippets format.

6. Facebook Page Like Widget

Facebook Page Like Widget

Facebook Page Like Widget allows you to easily add a Facebook page plugin to your blog’s sidebar. It is extremely easy to use and comes with a shortcode that you can use to display the Facebook Like box anywhere on your website.

It comes with the same customization options as the default Facebook page plugin. You can show or hide profile pics, include your page cover, customize width and height, and select language.

7. Nextend Social Login and Register

Nextend Social Login and Register

Nextend Social Login and Register plugin allows users to register and login on your website using their social profiles. It supports login with Facebook, Google, and Twitter.

This plugin works seamlessly with the default WordPress login and registration forms. Users have the option to use Facebook or use the default signup method. Once registered, a user can disconnect their social account at any time by visiting their user profile page inside the admin area.

8. FAuto Poster

FAuto Poster

FAuto Poster allows you to automatically share new articles on your Facebook page or profile. Upon activation, you will need to connect it to your profile and authorize your website.

It allows you to choose which content you want to share: posts, pages, and custom post types. You can even disable sharing for a single item before publishing it.

FAuto Poster is a lightweight plugin that’s quick and easy to install and configure. There’s also a pro version, which lets you automatically post to Twitter, LinkedIn, and Tumblr as well as to Facebook.

9. Social Snap

Social Snap

Social Snap lets you automatically post your content to Facebook. You can use it for other social media sites as well, including Instagram, Twitter, and LinkedIn.

It doesn’t just work for your new content, either. You can also use Social Snap to automatically re-share older content. That way, you can drive more traffic to content you’ve created in the past.

Social Snap also lets you add social links to your posts and pages and display follower counts. This can be a great form of social proof and can help grow your Facebook following.

Bonus: All in One SEO

All in One SEO

All in One SEO is one of the best WordPress SEO plugin on the market. It has a huge range of features that let you optimize your content to rank higher in search engines.

Although it’s not a social media plugin, we’ve included it as a bonus on this list for one very important feature. All in One SEO lets you add Open Graph metadata to your content. This means you have more control over how your content displays when it’s shared on Facebook.

Using All in One SEO, you can set a custom image thumbnail to appear alongside your content on Facebook. You can even give your content a different title or description to use on Facebook. Most importantly, it fixes the incorrect thumbnail issue on Facebook.

We hope this article helped you discover the best WordPress Facebook plugins to grow your blog. We also recommend going through our proven tips to drive traffic to your WordPress site, and our comparison of the best email marketing services to connect with your readers.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post 9 Best WordPress Facebook Plugins to Grow Your Blog appeared first on WPBeginner.


October 23, 2020 at 05:00PM

Thursday, October 22, 2020

How to Automatically Translate WordPress (Easy Method)

Do you want to automatically translate your WordPress site into other languages?

There are few different ways to translate your WordPress site: you can manual translations yourself, hire translators, or use AI powered translation tools which have gotten quite good over the years.

In this article, we’ll show you how to automatically translate WordPress using machine learning (the easy method).

Automatically translating WordPress the easy way

Why Automatically Translate Your WordPress Site?

Automatically translating your WordPress site lets you easily provide content in your users’ own languages.

Whereas translating your site manually takes a lot of time. You can make a multilingual WordPress website and pay translators to help with translations, but your costs will increase as you add more languages or hire more translators.

Automatically translating your site is quick and affordable. You could just translate a few important pages, or you could translate your whole site.

The translation quality may not be as good as manual translations. However, AI-powered tools have become much better and can provide a quicker and cost-effective alternative.

That being said, let’s take a look at how to easily set automatic translation on a WordPress site.

Setting Up the WPML Plugin

The easiest way to automatically translate WordPress is to use a translation plugin. We recommend WPML for this.

WPML is a premium plugin and you need their ‘Multilingual CMS’ plan or higher to run automatic translations.

First, you need to install and activate the WPML plugin. For more details, see our step by step guide on how to install a WordPress plugin.

Upon activation, click the ‘Register Now’ link that you will see on your plugins page. You will then see a page where you need to enter your site key. You can find this under your account on WPML website.

Entering the site key for WPML

Now, go to the WPML » Languages page in your WordPress admin. This will show the WPML setup options.

First, simply select the language for your current content, then click the Next button.

Selecting your content language

Now, you need to choose the languages to enable for your site. Just check the box next to the ones that you want to use.

Selecting your translation language(s)

The language options on your site will appear in a language switcher.

WPML will prompt you to choose an order for the languages in the switcher. You also need to choose what to do if a translation is missing for a specific page.

Choosing the order of languages for the language switcher

Below this, you can go ahead and add the language switcher to your navigation menu. If you prefer, you can add it to a widget or the footer area of your website.

Finally, you have the option to link to translations either above or below your posts. If you enable this option, you can choose how these translation links will look. You will also see a preview:

Setting up the translation links for your posts

When you’re ready, click the Next button to move on.

WPML will then ask you whether you want to send themes and plugin information to WPML.org. This can help speed things up if you need support.

Enabling compatibility reporting for WPML

Then, you need to enter your site key if you didn’t do so before. If you’ve already entered it, simply click the Next button.

After that, you will see some recommendations for other components to install. Go ahead and install and activate the String Translation and Translation Management addons at this step:

Viewing the setup recommendations

Finally, click the ‘Skip and Finish’ link in order to close the setup wizard.

Translating Your Content Automatically

To translate your content, you need to go to the WPML » Translation Management page in your WordPress admin.

Here, you need to choose who will translate your site. We recommend choosing ‘Only myself’ here:

Choosing who will translate your content

Next, you will see some details about the Advanced Translation Editor. Simply click to continue. You will then see a Summary, where you just need to go ahead and click the ‘Done!’ button.

After that, you will be taken to your translation management dashboard.

Here, you need to click on the ‘Translation Tools’ tab then the ‘Sign up for free’ button to set up automatic translations:

Signing up for automatic translations

Tip: You get 2,000 words/month of machine translation for free.

You will then be prompted to enter your billing details.

After that, click on the ‘Translation Dashboard’ tab. From here, you can select the content that you want to translate. We’re going to translate our About and Contact pages.

Simply check the boxes next to your chosen pages:

Viewing the list of pages in the translation dashboard

Once you select the content, you will see a word count estimate. This helps you budget for the automatic translations.

Next, scroll down to the ‘Select translation options’ section. This will default to creating translations of your chosen content in all languages, but you can change the settings if you want.

After making your selection, click on the ‘Add selected content to translation basket’ button.

Clicking the button to add your selected content to your translation basket

You should now see a new ‘Translation Basket’ tab at the top of the screen. Clicking on it will show you the pages that are ready for translation and total number of words that will be needed.

Go ahead and click the ‘Send all items for translation’ button:

Send your content for translation

You should then see a success message.

Next, go to the WPML » Translations page in your WordPress admin to see your translations queue.

To use the automatic translater, just click the ‘Take and translate’ button next to a version of a page.

The translations queue for WPML

You will then see the advanced translation editor. Here, you just need to click the ‘Yes, translate automatically’ button:

Click to automatically translate your content

WPML will now automatically translate your content into the chosen language using machine learning.

The completed Spanish translation of our content

Simply click the ‘Complete’ button at the bottom of the screen and you can then translate your other pages in the same way.

Viewing Your Translated Pages on Your Website

You can visit a page on your website and view the translated versions. Here’s how our About page now looks on our demo website:

The About page on our demo site, with translation language options shown

If we click the link for the French version, we see the translated page.

The About page, translated into French

Automatically Translating WordPress Content in Bulk

If you have a lot of content to translate, it’s quickest to do it as a batch. As before, you first need to add the content to your Translation Basket then send it for translation.

After that, go to the Translation Tools tab. Here, you will see the list of translation jobs. Click the checkbox at the top of the list to select them all:

Selecting your content for bulk automatic translation

Only 10 items fit on each page. You need to select any jobs on any subsequent pages too. Simply click the ‘2’ button to the bottom right of the table to do so.

Once you’ve selected all the jobs, click the ‘Translate automatically’ button:

Click the button to run the automatic bulk translator

They will be automatically translated for you. You can view the completed versions by viewing your site as before.

If you want to edit an automatic translation, simply go to Pages » All Pages in your WordPress dashboard. Then, click on the pencil icon for that language:

Editing one of the translations

This will then launch the Advanced Translation Editor.

The Advanced Translation Editor for WPML

To learn more about WPML, check out our article on creating a multilingual site.

Changing the Language of Your WordPress Admin

WPML also lets different users select different languages within the WordPress admin area.

it’s easy to do this by going to Users » Profile and selecting your preferred language from the Language dropdown:

Setting your WordPress admin language

Don’t forget to click the ‘Save Changes’ button at the bottom of the page.

Now, your admin area will then be translated into your chosen language:

The WordPress admin area shown in French

We hope this article helped you learn how to automatically translate WordPress. You may also like our article on the best translation plugins for WordPress, and our comparison of best online business phone services for virtual teams.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post How to Automatically Translate WordPress (Easy Method) appeared first on WPBeginner.


October 22, 2020 at 05:00PM

Wednesday, October 21, 2020

Welcome PushEngage to the WPBeginner Family of Products

Today, I’m extremely excited to share that PushEngage has joined Awesome Motive, and it is now part of the WPBeginner family of products.

PushEngage is a leading push notification software with over 10,000+ customers in 150+ countries who use the platform to reliably send over 9 billion notifications each month.

Welcome PushEngage to WPBeginner Family of Products

PushEngage & Push Notification Overview

PushEngage is a popular web push notification software for publishers and store owners. It helps you increase your website traffic, boost user engagement, and increase overall revenue.

Basically you can use it to send targeted personalized messages to users and bring them back to your website.

This can include new blog post notifications, product announcements, abandoned cart reminders, and more.

Push notifications go directly to the user’s web browser or mobile device which means it has a much higher engagement rate.

Web Push Notifications on Both Mobile and Desktop

For more details, see our guide on how to add push notifications to WordPress.

I first started using push notifications over 3 years ago and quickly realized that the click rate, engagement, and opt-in rate is significantly higher than my email newsletter or any other engagement channel.

Today our push subscriber list is larger than our email newsletter list, and push notifications consistently make the top 5 traffic sources on WPBeginner.

After seeing these results, I had all our companies start implementing push notifications, and they too have seen amazing success.

To make it easy for WPBeginner users to get started, we’re offering a forever free plan on PushEngage.

Grow Your Traffic with PushEngage for Free »

Background Story – Why PushEngage?

If you’ve been reading WPBeginner for a while, then you know that I’m obsessed with optimization.

Once I find something that works, then I want to improve it to get even better results.

This is a lot harder to do when you have no influence on the development team that’s building the actual software.

While some push notification software have developer APIs, they’re often unreliable and aren’t flexible enough to do the level of customization that I want for our businesses.

Furthermore, almost all of them have a really terrible integration with WordPress.

Since we use WordPress on all our sites, I needed a deeply integrated solution that can do automatic subscriber segmentation based on blog categories, seamless integration with our various eCommerce platforms for cart abandonment reminders, and an easy setup wizard that our team can use to add push notifications our new brands.

Since no other software had 100% of what I wanted, we started building an internal solution beginning of July.

Then 3 weeks later, completely randomly, I got an email from a friend, Andrew, who told me that I should chat with Ravi from PushEngage about a potential acquisition.

I was first introduced to Ravi by another friend, Harsh Agrawal, from ShoutMeLoud in 2017. That was when I first started using push notifications. I tried to invest in PushEngage but the timing wasn’t right.

But as soon as Ravi and I started chatting again, we knew that this was the right time for both of us.

Ravi has built an amazing team and a reputable brand at PushEngage. We share a similar vision and commitment to helping customers succeed online.

We talked and quickly came to an agreement where the entire PushEngage team would join Awesome Motive, so we can build the most user friendly push notification solution for WordPress and beyond.

I’m super excited about this acquisition and am looking forward to sharing our product development & business growth playbooks with the PushEngage team to bring more amazing features to the WordPress community (even faster, since we don’t have to build from scratch anymore).

What’s Coming Next?

Our work is just starting.

We will be leveraging the scale and knowledge of the Awesome Motive team to build more innovative solutions to help you maximize the full power of push notifications.

As part of this, we’ll build deeper integration with other Awesome Motive products, and popular platforms like WordPress, WooCommerce, Shopify, MemberPress, and others.

In the coming months, you can expect to see easier workflows to set up highly personalized push notifications campaigns that’s proven to drive results, improved opt-in technology that’ll help you get even more subscribers, and introduction of new message channels that you can use to expand your reach.

We have a lot to cover, but we’re up for the challenge. We have an exciting 12-month roadmap, and I know you’re going to love it.

If you have suggestions on features you’d like to see in the PushEngage platform, then please let us know by sending us a message via WPBeginner contact form.

In the meantime, I highly recommend you to take advantage of our free plan on PushEngage to start building your push subscribers list, so you can grow your traffic and revenue.

As always, I want to thank you for your continued support of WPBeginner. We look forward to bringing you more amazing solutions to help you grow your business.

Yours Truly,

Syed Balkhi
Founder of WPBeginner

The post Welcome PushEngage to the WPBeginner Family of Products appeared first on WPBeginner.


October 21, 2020 at 03:31PM