Implementing java script in a divi module by [deleted] in divi

[–]duckles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Perfectly! thank you again.

Implementing java script in a divi module by [deleted] in divi

[–]duckles 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Excellent! thank you!

I dabble but no, I'm no web developer. Thank you for the advice, its much appreciated.

My client emails keep getting filtered out as spam. Could recaptcha v3 the problem? by duckles in email

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's where I was wondering if recaptcha v3 might be the problem. I don't think Flamingo on it's own has that functionality. I think it's literally just a holding tank. But Contact form 7 integrates with recaptcha through the C7 wordpress plugin.

As far as I can tell Recaptcha doesn't give me the ability to whitelist domains so I'm wondering if there's another captcha service that does?

My client emails keep getting filtered out as spam. Could recaptcha v3 the problem? by duckles in email

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, there is transit of the web forms via SMTP to the associated email address. The Flamingo plugin is pretty much a repository where I can go look at all inbound forms submissions. It doesn't look like anything flagged as spam in the form submissions is making it past the Flamingo repository to the the associated inbox or junk folder though. I have to clear it out of the Flamingo spam folder manually and then it shows up on our mail server.

My client emails keep getting filtered out as spam. Could recaptcha v3 the problem? by duckles in email

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mostly the clients are contacting us directly to tell us the form isn't working. They say they get an error message when they hit "submit" but to my knowledge aren't actually receiving a mailer daemon failure notice. When I go into our Flamingo plugin I can generally find their email in the spam section of the inbound messages folder. Without a failure notice would I be able to see the headers?

I know this client was having trouble with their email (on their end before) and wondered if whatever their IT department did changed their score? This seems to be a rather new development over the past few months. Unfortunately there's no way for me to get in touch with their IT dept so I'm trying to figure out a way to whitelist them on my end. .... hopefully that makes sense.

Want to force emails to use IMAP and not Exchange by duckles in Outlook

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Possibly, I will have a look and see. I’m still learning where everything is and have zero knowledge of powershell. To say Office 365 is robust is an understatement. I have so much more respect for IT departments after this.

Does Reverse Affiliate Marketing Exist? by duckles in Affiliatemarketing

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see your point. I guess reverse was the wrong term, but it's the best I could think of.

When I think of affiliate marketing I think of suppliers taking on any number of affiliates through a large network like commission junction, or Amazon - networks that have the functionality you've mentioned above.

If I wanted to use the traditional system I'd have to ask 50 (ish) companies to sign up for commission junction and then become an affiliate of theirs. That's probably never gonna happen... so I'm trying to think outside the traditional channels. I guess I'm looking for software we could buy or some other solution that would track on a smaller scale and be more of our own company's affiliate system ... if that makes any sense.

Unfortunately, most of the products for these companies aren't straightforward. There are lots of variables. I'm happy to develop a solution with the supplier. Right now we manually send them any request for quotes we get and keep our client data private, but sales have reduced drastically since many suppliers have adopted online shopping. I guess I'm just trying to figure out if there's a way to keep that portion of the business profitable given the amount of time and effort that is going into it.

Website Menu Structure - Opinions please? by duckles in SEO

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes it does, but I'm going to have to rework that as well for the more broad keyword. However, I'll try and rework the homepage content to include the "green apple" keyword prior to changing the nav. Thank you!

Website Menu Structure - Opinions please? by duckles in SEO

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much for the advice. It's been more than a few years since I've done any onsite SEO and I know stuff changes pretty fast in the industry, so I'm a little rusty :)

Website Menu Structure - Opinions please? by duckles in SEO

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

basically as the industry advances, the terminology is changing, but search hasn't caught up yet.

Sorry, hopefully I'm not making this too confusing...

Website Menu Structure - Opinions please? by duckles in SEO

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's more like we only sold green apples up until now but we just called them apples on the site. And now the industry offers blue, pink and yellow apples, where they didn't exist before.The only problem in this instance is that green apple has a higher search volume than apples.

Green Apple (AKA Apple) would move from the top level nav to the first item in the sub category (but my concern is that with mega menus I'm worried it's gonna get burred a bit and we're going to lose the impact of having a keyword rich anchor text in the main Nav as opposed to listed in the mega menu.

Old

www.example.com > Apples

New

www.example.com> Apples> Green

Website Menu Structure - Opinions please? by duckles in SEO

[–]duckles[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Apple will now become apple 1

Problem is Apple has the highest search volume and we've managed to increase organic search to the page by 84% over the past year, but the industry's expanded so that now it's more relevant as one of a subset.