A tour of every page-level setting in the editor. These are the controls that affect a single page — its appearance, metadata, opt-in behaviour, and what shows in browser tabs and search results.
In the editor, open the Settings tab (right-hand panel). Settings are grouped into sections — each covered below.
These are page-level settings — they apply only to the page you're currently editing. Each page has its own settings.
Two controls for your page's main colours:
For more on choosing colours that convert, see the Page Colours guide.
The text that shows in the browser tab and gets used by Google as your page's clickable title in search results. Keep it under 60 characters.
This is one of the most important settings for SEO. Make it descriptive and include your main keyword if you want any chance of ranking.
A textarea where you can paste tracking pixels and other scripts that need to load in the page's <head>. Common uses:
Paste the full embed code as provided by the platform — including the <script> tags.
Only paste tracking code from sources you trust. Pasted code runs on your live page and can affect everything that loads.
The "Authority Box" is the small profile-style block (usually with a photo, name, and credentials) that builds trust at the top of your page.
Turn it off if your page design doesn't need a personal credibility marker (e.g. branded campaigns).
Adds a small "subscriber count" or "X people just opted in" indicator to your page. Used to show your page is popular and create FOMO.
Use honest numbers. Fabricated social proof is easily spotted and damages your credibility more than no social proof at all.
Catches visitors who are about to leave with a customisable popup. See the Exit Intent guide for full details.
Controls how the email capture form behaves:
Read the integration setup guides: Aweber, GetResponse.
Get an email every time someone opts in. See the Email Notifications guide.
The clickable text that opens your privacy policy. Default is "Privacy Policy" — change to whatever language you prefer.
The actual privacy policy text shown when a visitor clicks the privacy link. HTML is allowed for formatting (paragraphs, links, headers).
You should have a privacy policy. Most jurisdictions require one if you collect any personal data — including just an email address. If you're running ads, the ad networks usually require it too.
If you don't have one, search "privacy policy generator" and use one of the free tools to draft one for your business.
If you only configure a few things on each page, make these your priority:
When you duplicate a page from My Pages, all settings copy too. Useful for variants in an A/B test — both sides start identical, you only change the one thing being tested.
Contact support if you're stuck.