Your returning visitors are your most valuable audience. They’ve already shown interest in your content and are coming back for more. But here’s the thing: when they land on your homepage, they’re looking for one specific thing — what’s new since their last visit. The… Read More »
Recently one of our users asked us about how to add a fade in effect for the last widget in the sidebar. This popular jQuery effect is used on many well-known websites and blogs. As the user scrolls down the page, the last widget in… Read More »
Over the years, WPBeginner has received a lot of questions about tags, one of them being whether it’s worth the effort to style WordPress tags to make them stand out on a page. Tags help you organize your content into topics. They’re like hashtags for… Read More »
When developing WordPress themes, sometimes you may need user’s browser and operating system information to modify certain aspects of your design using CSS or jQuery. WordPress is capable of doing that for you. In this article, we will show you how to add user’s browser… Read More »
This is a guest post by Josh Pollock The Pinterest-like grid display of posts has been a popular design for WordPress blog index pages for a while. It is popular not only because it mimics the look of the popular social media site, but also… Read More »
Comments allow users to engage with the content on your website. That’s why we believe that it is important to style your comments layout and comment form, so it is user-friendly as well as good looking. Recently, a user asked us how they can add… Read More »
We’ve found that setting fallback featured images for WordPress categories is a huge time-saver, especially for blogs with a high volume of content. If you have articles that don’t have a featured image, or if you want all the posts in a category to have similar… Read More »
A clean, slide-out search toggle can instantly make your WordPress site feel sleek and modern. Instead of displaying a full search bar in your header or hiding it completely, a toggle effect keeps your design tidy while making search easy to access. We’ve seen this… Read More »
When we’re developing new plugins, creating tutorials, or testing code snippets, we often need to set up demo sites quickly. But let’s face it: building an entire website’s worth of content from scratch is time-consuming. You might be facing this same problem, too. There are… Read More »
WordPress powers millions of sites in various languages, making it a great choice for building multilingual websites. However, to build a multilingual website, your theme needs to handle different languages smoothly. If your theme is not translation-ready, changing the text into different languages will be… Read More »
Used to store interaction and conversion data for campaigns in conjunction with Revenue Attribution.
1 year
_gat_omTracker*
Set, controlled and used by Google Analytics to collect and store data and then send that data to Google Analytics. OptinMonster provides the name if there is no existing tracker found on that page.
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omCountdown-{id}-{elementId}
Used for countdown elements {elementId} in campaigns {id} to determine when it should complete.
-
om-{id}-closed / omSlideClosed-{id}
Used specifically with slide-in campaigns {id} to determine if it has been closed or not by a visitor.
30 days
om-success-cookie / omSuccessCookie
Used to determine if a visitor has successfully opted in to any campaign on your site to unlock content when using our Content Locking feature.
365 days
om-success-{id} / omSuccess-{id}
Used to determine if a visitor has successfully opted in to a campaign with the ID of {id} on your site.
365 days
omSeen-{id}
Used to determine if a visitor has been shown a campaign by the slug.
30 days
om-{id}
Used to determine if a visitor has interacted with a campaign ID of {id} on your site.
30 days
_omappvs
Used to determine when a new visitor becomes a returning visitor.