Autoresponder WordPress Registration Form - RegistrationMagic.com https://registrationmagic.com/tag/autoresponder-wordpress-registration-form/ WordPress User Registrations Forms Plugin Tue, 23 Jul 2024 09:18:41 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 How to setup autoresponder for WordPress registration forms? https://registrationmagic.com/setup-autoresponder-wordpress-registration-forms/ https://registrationmagic.com/setup-autoresponder-wordpress-registration-forms/#comments Sun, 07 Aug 2016 21:57:14 +0000 http://registrationmagic.com/?p=20351 Of all the accoutrements accompanying registration form systems, autoresponder is arguably the most important one. Take it out, and your form is patently mute. It simply cannot ‘talk back’ to the user. An autoresponder for WordPress registration forms is both a feedback and user engagement tool. Although, in times when users expect an auto-responder shooting […]

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Of all the accoutrements accompanying registration form systems, autoresponder is arguably the most important one. Take it out, and your form is patently mute. It simply cannot ‘talk back’ to the user. An autoresponder for WordPress registration forms is both a feedback and user engagement tool. Although, in times when users expect an auto-responder shooting back from every form they fill, making them personal and non-spammy is an essential art. This was at center of our focus when we built the autoresponder for WordPress registration forms in RegistrationMagic.

First things, first. Before putting our forms to work, we must first configure our installation of RegistrationMagic. Let’s head over to Global Settings → Email Notifications panel.

email-notifications

Here we shall configure outgoing mails. “Enable SMTP” is for configuring an external SMTP relay to send out emails. It is always a good idea to use a reliable and authenticated SMTP relay to make sure outgoing emails are not eaten up by overzealous spam filters. Next, “Display name for sender” defines the sender’s name inside user’s inbox. Usually this will be your business name. “From Email” is your email that user can reply to. It’s important to make sure that you have access to this email account.

email-notifications-options

Let’s create our registration form and then configure the autoresponder for WordPress registration forms. Here we’re creating a generic registration form for demonstration purpose, named “Demo Form”, keeping it real short to avoid any confusion.

demo-form

We have 3 fields inside this form here – “First Name”, “Last Name” and “Email”. Now we go back to “Forms Manager” and find the “Demo Form” card, and click on Settings link.

find-settings

On the Form Configuration page, click on “Auto Responder”.

auto-responder

Once inside, clicking on the checkbox against Auto-Reply the User will reveal auto-responding options. Unchecking the box again will turn off the autoresponder for this particular form. Options include “Subject Line” and “Email Body”. Subject line does what it says – but it will also be the first thing user sees, so we better make it relevant.

In the email body, we have option to add values which user has filled in the form to make it more personalized. For example, we want to start with something like “Hi (User’s First Name),”. To do this, we write down the text and use dropdown above the editor named Add Fields to insert the field values. So the starting will look something like this:

mail-merge

We see that the dropdown has 3 options: First Name, Last Name and Email. These correspond to the 3 fields we have on the form.

In short, we can fetch any field in the form and insert it inside the autoresponder text using the dropdown. Fields will get added to the dropdown as they are created in the Fields Manager of the form. Let’s go ahead and finish our message and save it.

the-message

The auto-responder is all set!

We’re going to fill out the form and test it. Please note, there are other feedback tools available in RegistrationMagic. For example, Success Message and Redirections, which are inside Post Submission panel. We can combine them with auto-responder to create powerful feedback workflow. In this tutorial we are only focusing on auto responding though.

Here’s the form all filled up and ready to be sent:

the-form

Let’s submit this and check our inbox.

received-message

As expected, the auto-responder message arrives in our inbox. This is what the user will receive after filling out the form we just created.

That’s all you need to know to start building autoresponder for WordPress registration forms. Remember, each form has its own auto-responder. So don’t forget to configure it before publishing the form. Until next time…

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