Say Goodbye to Multiple Registrars: Transfer Your Domains to The Hub

Have a domain purchased from somewhere else besides WPMU DEV? It’s now easier than ever to transfer them to our platform in The Hub with our domain transfer-in feature.

As you’ll see, it only takes three steps to quickly establish a domain into a new home at WPMU DEV – so you can manage everything under one roof!

Plus, you’re in control regarding nameservers, autorenewal, associating a domain with a client, and more.

In this article, we’ll look at:

After reading this, you’ll immediately be able to implement transferring domains into one easy-to-manage system – cheaply and effectively.

But first…

Before we get into the steps to transfer a domain, here are some general guidelines to get you in good shape:

transfer tips
These tips will set you on the right course to domain transfer!

Now, if you’re ready — let’s begin!

Triggering Domain Transfers

There are several ways to transfer a domain over. Whether it’s an established domain with us or you have a third-party domain service, it’s a breeze.

There are just a few differences…

New User

If you’re a new user with no registered or connected domains, you’ll get started in The Hub by clicking the Domains tab and Transfer a Domain.

New user view for domains.
No domains in our system? This area will get you started.

Already have domains registered or connected? Under Registered Domains, you’ll start by clicking Transfer Domain.

Transfer domain tab
This gets you started right away.

Another route is if you have connected any domain(s), click on the ellipsis icon on any domain’s row to show the available management options for that domain. From that, click on the Transfer Domain to Us button.

Use us for domain
You have other options under the ellipsis as well, such as managing and rechecking DNS.

Additionally, you can click on any connected domain’s row, which will open up Nameserver details for that specific domain. Clicking the Transfer Domain to Us button is another way to get the process going.

transfer domain to us.
As you can see, the price per year is also mentioned here.

Whatever option you choose will lead to an area where you can start the 3-step process.

Step 1: Domain Eligibility Check

In this first step, we check whether the domain is transferable.

To start, you’ll specifically enter the domain you want to transfer. Enter it completely with its TLD (e.g. .com).

Transfer existing domain
Once entered, hit ‘Transfer’ to continue.

If a domain is ineligible, you’ll get an error message. The messages will vary, depending on the issue.

error message.
In this example, it’s an invalid TLD.

Almost any domain TLD is okay to transfer. We have over 260 TLDs that are available for use and transfers. For any questions or issues about this, please contact support or see our documentation for rules and reasons a domain doesn’t transfer.

That being said, if all is good and the domain is eligible, once you hit Transfer, it will take you to the nameserver step.

Step 2: Nameserver Settings

This step is where you can choose to use our nameservers and DNS records, or keep current nameservers. If existing DNS records are available, they will be shown here. If not, it will be blank and state that there are no records to display.

Nameservers options.
Choose where you’d like to manage your DNS in one click.

If you choose to Keep Current Nameservers, it will keep the current nameserver records for the domain.

Current nameservers.
The type of nameserver and TTL is listed.

Once you decide on what’s best for you, you can continue on…

And for help pointing a domain to our nameservers, check out our complete guide on how to do so.

Step 3: Transfer Registration

Registering a domain is all done in one area.

You can start by viewing the Registration Terms. You’ll notice the transfer price, renewal price, auto-renew option, and whether domain privacy is active or not.

Want auto-renew? It’s a click away.

Next, the domain will need an Authorization Code from your current registrar. This is a normal process that is universal amongst domains. You’ll get this from the losing domain register you’re transferring from.

Authorization code area.
You’ll need this code from the domain provider you’re transferring from.

Additionally, you’ll also add the Registrant Information. You can associate the domain with a client or add personal details.

Registrant information area.
You can always go back and edit this information at any time.

Then, checkout in the Summary. This has the Domain Name, Registration Period, and Price. Plus, it shows whether Auto-Renew is activated or not.

The price summary for the domain.
Read the Terms of Service and Privacy Policy for more information.

After hitting Pay Now, you’re all set!

By default, the Registration Period of all the transfer-in domains is set to One year. Pay the transfer fee on our pricing page to transfer a domain to WPMU DEV. Upon successful transfer, the domain’s expiration date will be extended by one year.

It’s also important to note that if the Authorization code is invalid, the domain transfer will fail, and the transfer amount will be refunded to your account.

The Domain Transfer Process

Once the new domain transfer-in payment is complete, the Domain Registration process begins. You’ll be able to see the status under Domain Overview.

The transferring status.
The transferring part is always highlighted in orange.

The system will verify three registrant contact data pieces: First Name, Last Name, and Email Address. For more information about registrant verification, please read our documentation.

When complete, you’ll see that it’s Active OR Verifying. Also, additional information will be displayed (e.g. Registration Date, Expiration date, Costs, etc).

 

Sign indicating that a domain is active.
All other information is displayed, too.

Be aware that the domain transfer can take up to five days – and that’s out of our control. It depends on how quickly the verification can take place from the losing register (e.g. GoDaddy).

Once completed, your domain will then be available in the Domains area in The Hub – along with any others you have.

Bulk Domain Transfer

Last but not least, if you need to do a Bulk Domain Transfer, contact our 24/7/365 support to help assist with this. It’s the easiest and quickest way to get any bulk domains transferred over to our system.

The Main Way to Manage Your Domain

As you can see, bringing in domains from third-party providers is quick and easy, with only three steps. And once done, you can manage all your domains in one place with The Hub!

Adding domains to a client’s site, setting up auto-renewal, connecting nameservers – the process couldn’t be more streamlined. So, try bringing a new domain in today. Good luck, and enjoy!

Oh, and if you’re not on our Agency Plan yet, give it a go. Not only do you get domain management like bringing in third-party domains, you’ll also have access to unlimited site licences, 500GB CDN, $144 hosting credits, and more.

Do More With Your Forms: New Forminator Reports and Webhooks Integration

Track and optimize the performance of forms, polls, and quizzes with new Forminator reports, plus, integrate with even more automation tools that support webhooks. We break down version 1.18 of the plugin in this article.

Want to monitor and improve the performance of your (or your clients) forms? Forminator’s new reports dashboard allows you to easily track views, submissions, conversions, and more.

Forminator 1.18 also introduced a new Webhook Integration, allowing you to send submission data to any automation tool that supports webhooks.

In this article, we’ll demonstrate how these features work and how easy it is to implement them.

Skip ahead to any section you’d like to learn more about:

Let’s begin!

Performance Reports for Forms, Polls, and Quizzes

Forminator’s reports are here to make your forms better than ever, giving you instant and detailed information regarding views, submissions, conversion rates, and more.

This helps you test your forms, manage your income and analytics, and ensure any form is up to par.

There are a number of different report modules, each gives insights into different form metrics. Let’s cover them now, starting with the main reports dashboard…

Reports Dashboard

It all begins at the Reports dashboard. You pick whether you want to view a report from a Form, Quiz, or Poll in the dropdown.

Contact forms in the reports area.
In this example, we’re looking at a report for a created form named ‘Contact Form.’

Then simply select the Date Range you want to see reports for. Or, add your custom timeline by clicking on the calendar dates.

Date range for forms.
Change the timeline to anything you’d like.

Overview

The Overview shows Views, Submissions, and Conversion Rate. It also displays the date and time of the last submission and reporting dates.

With the overview, you can keep track of your form’s performance in a simple, easy-to-read area.

Forminator - Reports overview screen.
508 views, 113 submissions, and a 22.2% conversion rate…this form’s performing great!

Views

The Views section displays the number of views and how it compares to the previous period. Once your form is implemented for a while, you’ll also start receiving Monthly Average reporting.

The views area.
The percentage of views is up 27%.

Submissions

One of the most important form metrics. View the total number of submissions, how the submissions compare to the previous period, and your monthly average.

Submissions area.
Want more information? Go to ‘View Submissions.’

You can also view individual submissions. View ID, Date Submitted, First Name, and Email Address.

Forminator - Form submission area
The submissions are shown for this particular form.

Need to look even further into individual submissions? You can open up more details – including email addresses, phone numbers, names – depending on the fields implemented on your form.

Very detailed submission.
This is Bob’s submission, with a message that was included.

Additionally, you can also make it easier to sort through all the submissions by including various filters — such as date range, keywords, IDs, sort order, and more.

Forminator filters screen.
Add any filters to sort more easily and efficiently.

Conversion Rate

Keep tabs on performance with the Conversion Rate report. This shows how many submissions opted-in instead of leaving the form’s page.

Conversion rate
This particular form’s performance sits at 22.2%.

You also get a glimpse of the monthly average conversion rate.

Payments

Forminator also provides Payments (forms only for one-time payments – not subscriptions) information. This feature helps you to keep track of sales and how much income is in each account.

You’ll see what you made in a given period compared to a previous one. Plus, it shows you where it came from Stripe or PayPal.

A view of the payments report inside of Forminator
No payment area will be included if you don’t have any data.

Apps

Forminator is amazing for 3rd-party apps, allowing you to integrate with thousands of applications for collecting data, emails, analytics, and more.

In the Apps area, monitor the data sent to 3rd-party apps and how they compare to previous periods. It will show you the difference in numbers and percentages of all the active apps you have.

The integrations area.
In this form, we have HubSpot and Mailchimp integrated.

For more information, read our article on integrating 3rd party apps and after-submission behavior.

Leads

The Leads feature is just for Forminator quizzes. It shows the number of leads you’ve collected over a period. You’ll also see the monthly average of new leads.

A look at the leads report inside of Forminator
In this case, the monthly average is 26 new leads.

The notifications are essential to know if your quiz is performing well.

Automation Webhooks to Send Data Automatically to 3rd Party Apps

Forminator’s new Webhooks integration allows you to send submission data to automation tools, including Zapier, Integrately, Tray.io, Make, Workato, and other automation tools where webhooks function.

Setting up Webhooks is all done from the Integrations tab. If not installed already, you’ll see it as an Available App.

Just click on the Plus (+) sign and click Activate.

Where you activate webhoooks.
One click gets you started.

Once activated, you’re ready to start using Webhook with forms, quizzes, polls, and your 3rd party applications.

We’ll run through a quick example of how to integrate webhooks with a 3rd party app.

In this example, I’ll be using MailChimp.

Webhooks will now be there from individual forms in the Integrations area. Then, click the Plus (+) sign next to Webhook to get started.

applications
All of the applications that are activated are located here.

The next popup is where you’ll Name the Webhook and enter the Webhook URL.

webhook information area.
Give a name that relates to what it’s used for.

So, how do you get a Webhook URL?

Obviously, it varies on each 3rd-party app. They’re all different. In the case of MailChimp, for example, here’s the process:

  1. Log into Mailchimp and navigate to Audience
  2. Select the audience you want to work with in the Current Audience dropdown
  3. Click on the Manage Audience dropdown button and then Settings
  4. On the Settings page, click Webhooks
  5. Tap the Create New Webhook button
  6. In the Callback URL field, add the URL of the integration or application where you want to send webhook requests—this URL will receive data about your Mailchimp audience.

Once you have your URL established, add it to the Webhook URL area, and that’s it!

You can edit the Conditions anytime and do further editing in MailChimp.

The conditions area.
Any changes with Conditions can be made from here.

For more information on setting this up with MailChimp, please read their article about setting up webhooks. And for another example of using Zapier, check out our documentation.

WordPress Forms Have Never Been Better With Detailed Reports and Webhook Integration

Be sure to take advantage of reports so that you can ensure your forms, polls, and quizzes are at peak performance.

And get automated by activating Webhooks to your favorite 3rd party applications!

By the way, if you’re not using our five-star rated Forminator – it’s free and available on WordPress.org for download. It’s also freely included in our free WPMU DEV plan, along with a whole suite of WordPress plugins and site management tools.

How to Build Order Forms with Payments for Free in WordPress

You lose 100% of the sales you don’t ask for, and the same holds true for having a clunky checkout experience. Order forms help you to collect order information and process payments efficiently, thereby increasing your conversion rates significantly.

Forminator makes it easier than ever to build an order form and accept payments on WordPress. Oh ya…and the best part is, it’s completely free! And that includes PayPal and Stripe payment gateways!

Whether you’re planning to sell merchandise, collect donations or get rooms booked, Forminator does them all without skipping a beat. His simple drag-and-drop interface means that you don’t need to know any coding whatsoever. It’s truly the one form maker plugin to rule them all!

**Long live Forminator!**

In this post, I’ll show you step-by-step how to use Forminator to build an order form from scratch and have set it up to collect payments effortlessly with Stripe and/or PayPal.

Introducing the Fantastic Forminator

Forminator is a powerhouse of a form plugin. He supports conditional logic, stores all the form entries in an easily accessible database, sends emails to both the user and the admin, and does it all without reloading the page.

To supercharge your forms, Forminator integrates with popular third-party tools such as Mailchimp, AWeber, ActiveCampaign, Google Sheets, Zapier, and Slack. Here’s an integration guide to automate your form workflow with Zapier.

He’s also GDPR compliant and works seamlessly with WordPress’ new Gutenberg block editor. If you can think of a form, Forminator can almost certainly get it done.

Let’s Build an Order Form

For this demo, we’ll build a simple order form, like the one below, to sell a custom notebook. We’ll make it so that the users can enter their personal information (such as name, address, email and phone number), and then at the very end, place an order by completing the payment.

Screenshot of the order form we'll be building

Follow the steps below and/or enjoy the video we’ve put together to accompany this post:

 

Step 1: Install Forminator

To install Forminator, just go to your WordPress Dashboard, and under Plugins, choose Add New and search for Forminator. Click the Install Now button and Activate the plugin after installation.

If you’re a WPMU DEV Member, you can also install and activate Forminator Pro directly from the WPMU DEV Dashboard. If you’re not a member yet, what are you waiting for? Try it free for 30 days!

Using the free WordPress.org version of Forminator is totally cool too. This tutorial works perfectly fine with either version.

Step 2: Access the Forminator Dashboard

Go to Forminator’s Dashboard. This will give you a quick overview of all your forms, quizzes, and polls.

Forminator’s minimalist yet easy-to-use Dashboard.

You won’t see any data here now, but as you start creating forms and collecting user entries, the dashboard will start populating with views, submissions, conversion rates, and other interesting data.

Step 3: Let’s Create a Form

Go to Forminator > Forms and click either of the blue Create buttons to begin making your new form. You can also do the same directly from Forminator’s dashboard.

A popup will appear where you need to enter your new form’s name. Keep the form name unique and memorable so that you can recall it easily. Click the blue Create button after entering your form name.

By default, every form in Forminator comes with the following predefined fields: First Name, Email Address, Phone Number, and Message.

The default form fields can be edited or deleted, and with the option of adding many other fields, you have unlimited customization possibilities.

Note: The fields marked with a red asterisk (*) at the end are Required fields. The form won’t submit until the user fills them up.

Step 4: Adding the Order Form Fields

We’ll keep the First Name, Email Address and Phone Number fields, and delete the Message field which we don’t need for this form.

In the First Name field, click on the gear icon and select Duplicate. This is a faster way to insert multiple fields of the same type without accessing the Insert Fields menu repeatedly.

Rename the duplicated field as Last Name.

Drag the Last Name field to the same row as the First Name, to its right, so that they appear side by side in the form.

And just like that, you have a two-column row in your form.

All Forminator fields can be dragged and dropped into rows and columns, so you have maximum flexibility in designing your forms just the way you want them.

Next, click on the purple Insert Fields button. It should open a popup with all the field options you can add to the form. There’s also another Insert Fields link at the bottom of the form.

Select the Address option from the popup window, and click the Insert Fields button.

Once inserted, click on the Address row to open its field settings. In the Labels tab, you can activate or deactivate the different address subfields (they’re all enabled by default).

Underneath the Settings tab, mark all the address subfields as required since they’re essential to ship the product.

Finally, click on the gear icon of Message field and hit Delete.

You can retain the Message field if you want to give users an option to add a comment or preference.

Step 5: Adding the Stripe Payment Button and Integration

Click on the purple Insert Fields button and select the Stripe option.

Stripe enables you to supercharge your online sales with its hassle-free and secure payment gateway.

Note: You need an activated Stripe account to configure the Stripe field. Otherwise, it won’t let you edit it. If you need help to set it up, use Forminator’s documentation as a cheatsheet.

You can configure Stripe by going to Settings > Payments > Stripe under Forminator.

Once Stripe is configured, under the Stripe field settings, we need to set the payment amount. Since this is a single product with an all-inclusive price and no variations, we’ll select the Fixed payment option.

When user inputs affect the price (ex. different sized t-shirts or customization options), or if there is a calculation such as tax or shipping that will be added to the original price, the Variable option should be used instead.

Select Fixed in the Stripe field settings and enter the amount.

Also, note the Test and Live mode options mentioned on the top here. We’ll be using the Test mode for now.

Don’t forget to set your brand logo, company name and product description under the Checkout tab. It’s great to have a self-branded payment gateway popup.

The below image shows how the self-branded popup will look like. Cool, isn’t it?

Next, change the Submit button label from Send Message to Order Now.

Preview the form and ensure it’s working as you intend. You can edit the default placeholders in the form if they’re not to your liking.

The order form is good to go!

Step 6: Let’s Jazz It Up

Forminator lets you make basic style changes to the form easily. The Appearance section helps you set your form’s Design Style, Colors, Fonts, Padding, Borders, Spacing, etc.

Click on the Appearance button to move on to its settings.

You can choose your preferred style here. I like the look of the Flat style more than the Default one, however this choice is up to you. It also offers you a way to add Custom CSS for your form.

As for the Colors and Fonts, I prefer the theme defaults and will leave them as is. Save your form draft after making your changes.

Step 7: Form Submitted. Next What?

Forminator is like a cool and casual professor. He’s fun and intelligent, but he also makes sure that the forms behave properly.

In the Behavior settings, you can define how the form will behave after the user successfully submits the form, or in this case, places an order.

By default, the form will show an inline message that will close automatically within 5 seconds. Change the message here to better reflect an order form.

You also have the option of redirecting the user to a new page or hiding the form altogether.

If you’re collecting payments, it’s highly recommended that you have the “Require SSL certificate to submit this form” option checked. It’ll enable your form to collect payments securely.

The rest of the Behavior settings can be left as is.

Step 8: Email Me Please, and to the User Too

After finishing up with setting the Behavior, move to the Email Notifications settings.

By default, every form will send you (the admin) an email with details of all the form fields entered.

You can change it and/or add multiple recipients too. You also have the option of adding Cc and Bcc fields to the email.

It’s good practice to send an automatic order confirmation email to the user. This option can be enabled in the Email Notifications settings.

Make sure that the recipient here is set to Email Address, which is the label for the email address entered by a user in the form. For example, if a user enters username@gmail.com as their email address in the form, the order confirmation email will be sent to that address automatically.

Forminator also lets you set Integrations with various third-party apps, and change the overall form settings. For this order form, we won’t be adding any Integrations, and will stick to the default settings.

Step 9: Hit the Publish Button

Preview the form one last time before pressing the Publish button.

Hey, give yourself a pat on the back. You just created your first order form!

After hitting the Publish button, a popup will present you with the form’s shortcode. Copy and place this shortcode anywhere in your site to display it to users.

You can also copy the shortcode later from Forminator’s Dashboard.

Step 10: Add the Order Form to Your Sales Page

Create a sales page if you don’t have one yet. It should contain all the important product details such as name, image, description, price, etc.

If you’re using the Classic Editor plugin, you can copy and paste the shortcode to add the form to your post/page. For sites that are using the default Block Editor, adding a form is much simpler.

To place the order form at the bottom of your sales page, in your WordPress post/page editor, click the Plus icon and add a Form block.

Next, select your order form from here to add it to the page.

Publish or Update your sales page after you’ve added the order form to it.

Visitors to your website can now use this form to place an order. It’s that simple!

Important Note: The Stripe field in your order form is still set to Test mode. This is to help you make test payments and make sure that everything is working fine. Before accepting actual orders, you need to change it from Test to Live.

Once an order has been placed, you’ll be notified of it via mail. Forminator also stores all the form submissions in a database so that it’s easier for you to sort through them later.

To view all of a form’s submissions, visit Forminator > Forms in your dashboard. Click on the gear icon and select View Submissions.

You can click on any individual submission row to get its complete details. You can also push the Export button to download all the submissions as a .csv file.

Reach > Engage > Convert

Running an online business comes with a lot of challenges. Anything that helps you engage with your potential customers and get paid easier is a welcome addition, and that’s exactly what Forminator does.

What we’ve built here is the simplest of order forms that you can make with Forminator. With its support for conditional logic, it can do much more! You can set taxes, shipping rates, product variations, and then have the form calculate the final order amount automatically.

You can check out a few of the order form and payment demos here and see how versatile Forminator really is.

Start creating!