Whether you want maximum exposure, zero interruptions, or a gentle second chance, the configurations below cover it — with clear steps to implement each.
Use case 1: Teaser is always on the site + widget displays according to conditions
This setup gives you the widest coverage, as visitors always see the teaser, so they have multiple chances to interact. It’s perfect for promotions you don’t want users to miss, such as welcome discounts, free shipping thresholds, or lead magnets.
Best for:
E-commerce: ‘10% off your first order’.
SaaS: ‘Start free trial’.
Blogs and media: ‘Subscribe to our newsletter’.
Important — close button behavior
If Show close button is enabled and a visitor clicks it, the teaser is permanently dismissed for that visitor. If you want a persistent (‘always-on’) teaser, keep the close button off. |
How to set it up
Enable teaser visibility
In the When to show teaser tab, select Before the widget displayed and after widget is closed.
2. Configure widget display rules
Go to Triggering in the widget settings.
Set conditions for when the popup itself should appear (for example, after 20 seconds on the page, after scrolling, etc).
The teaser stays visible regardless of these rules, but the popup will show when the chosen conditions are met.
With this setup, you combine automatic widget triggers with a persistent teaser, ensuring visitors always have access to your offer while still benefiting from smart targeting rules.
Use case 2: Teaser is always on the site, widget displayed only via teaser click
This setup prioritizes visitor comfort and brand trust. The popup never interrupts the browsing flow — visitors choose when to open it. Works especially well if your audience is sensitive to popups. Keeps the page layout free of automatic interruptions while still leaving a visible call-to-action.
Best for:
High-consideration purchases: insurance, legal services, B2B SaaS — where aggressive popups might damage perception.
Content-heavy sites: educational platforms, online courses, news sites, where interruptions break concentration.
Permanent CTA campaigns: when you want the teaser to act as a fixed ‘button’ leading to a form, reward, or subscription.
How to set it up
1. Enable teaser visibility
In the When to show teaser tab, select Before the widget displayed and after widget is closed.
2. Set the widget to display only via teaser click
Open the Triggering tab of the widget.
Under When to display, select Show only by clicking on teaser.
With this setup, the teaser becomes a standalone, always-visible call-to-action, while the widget works only as its expanded version — giving visitors full control over when to interact.
Use case 3: Teaser appears after the widget is displayed once, and stays until the goal is completed
It catches visitors who closed the popup too early or weren’t ready yet. Keeps the offer handy without overwhelming first-time visitors.
Great for discounts with urgency, loyalty/referral joins, and more:
Urgent discounts: ‘20% off today only’.
Loyalty / referral: ‘Join our rewards program’.
How to set it up
1. Teaser timing
Open When to show teaser → select After widget is closed
2. Stop conditions
Go to Triggering → When to stop displaying
Enable After subscription or After playing the game (for gamified widgets) → choose From this widget.
The popup shows once according to its trigger. After the visitor closes it, the teaser appears and stays available across your targeted pages, letting them come back anytime — until they subscribe/play the game.
