Convertri Updates – 09/08/22

Convertri Updates – 09/08/22

Happy summer!

Forms are the word of the day here at Convertri HQ, as we’ve got a bunch of new features, updates and bug fixes that concentrate on custom form fields and the form widget.

Not only that, but we’ve got some interesting updates to our webhooks feature that will let you collect even more data than previously.

So, without further ado, let’s dive in:

FEATURES

Custom form fields – you’ve always been able to collect info in your forms that isn’t listed in our form field types, such as “favourite color”: you just needed to assign a form field type that wasn’t being used. That was confusing to a lot of people, and if you had a big form you may have run out of form fields. But now, we’ve added a custom form field input which you can use as many times as you want to collect all the info you need.

Custom fields are currently API-only.  We’re looking into expanding this functionality to other areas of the app like Zapier.

Webhooks – we’ve added Facebook pixel ID’s, Facebook clicks ID’s, Google clicks ID’s and UTM data to our webhook payload, so now you can track clicks and sales much easier with webhooks.

New funnel template – the Evergreen Product template is now available in the Funnel Designer. It has a content page, upsells, downsells, and a delivery page.

BUGS

Form widget – if you set up your sales page with tax  for certain regions, this may now have shown up in the subtotal details unless the buyer ticked the bump-sale box first. This meant the subtotal shown was wrong. We’ve fixed the issue.

INTERESTING STUFF

Last week I asked everybody in the Facebook group if there was anything they’d like to request to do with text elements, and the answers were pretty interesting:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/convertri/posts/2928140830663261/

Dan shared a video about our brand new feature which lets you customise your “sending form” message:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/convertri/posts/2929234283887249/

And on this day in history, construction began on a little old bell tower in Italy that became internationally famous as the Leaning Tower of Pisa. It’s famous for its nearly four-degree lean, lending itself to millions of hilarious “pushing-it-up” tourist photos, and for Galileo dropping two cannonballs off it to demonstrate the law of free fall. This may or may not have contributed to it’s weak foundations. If the thought of things being off-kilter makes you weak,  or you want to create your own leaning tower with less effort, learn how to rotate images in Convertri:

https://www.facebook.com/groups/convertri/posts/2921445417999469/

Stay safe, and happy converting!

Beth

Executive Word Arranger at Convertri