How to Create a Simple Event Calendar with Sugar Calendar

Do you want to add an event calendar to your WordPress website?

A calendar is a great way to share in-person and virtual events with your visitors. You can use one to promote your upcoming events, get more people to attend, and help with brand awareness.

In this article, we’ll show you how to easily create a simple event calendar in WordPress with Sugar Calendar.

Why Create a Simple Event Calendar For Your WordPress Website?

By adding a calendar in WordPress, you can show upcoming events to your visitors.

This makes it easy for people to learn about your upcoming webinars, virtual retreats, online sermons, coaching calls, and more. In this way, a calendar can promote your events and encourage more people to attend.

If you have a membership website or a forum, then you can even accept user-submitted events. This is a great way to build a community, attract new visitors, and keep your calendar updated with the latest events. You’ll also save time since you don’t need to research upcoming events and add them to the calendar yourself.

With that being said, let’s see how you can add a simple event calendar to your site.

How to Create a Simple Event Calendar in WordPress

The easiest way to add an event calendar to WordPress is by using Sugar Calendar. It is the best WordPress calendar plugin and has everything you need to create multiple calendars, set start and end times for your events, sync with Google Calendar, and more.

The first thing you need to do is install and activate the Sugar Calendar plugin. For more details, see our step-by-step guide on how to install a WordPress plugin.

Upon activation, head over to the Calendar » Settings page. Here, you can enter your license key into the ‘License Key’ field.

You’ll find this key by logging into your Sugar Calendar account. It’s also in the email you got when you purchased Sugar Calendar.

After that, click on the ‘Verify’ button to check that your license key is valid. Finally, you can click on ‘Save Changes’ to store your settings.

Once you’ve done that, you’re ready to create a calendar by going to Calendar » Calender.

Here, click on the ‘Calendars’ tab.

You can now click on the ‘Add Calendar’ button.

This opens a popup where you can type a title into the ‘Name’ field. Sugar Calendar lets you create multiple calendars, but it only adds a single calendar view to your site. Visitors can switch between the different calendar views using a dropdown menu.

That being said, the ‘Name’ should help visitors tell the difference between the various calendars.

Similar to child pages, you can arrange calendars in parent-child relationships.

Children appear beneath their parents in the WordPress dashboard, so this can be a useful way to organize your calendars. This is particularly true if you have lots of different calendars.

All calendars are parent calendars by default. To create a child calendar, you’ll need to open the ‘Parent’ dropdown and then choose the calendar that you want to use as the parent.

Next, you can add an optional description. Depending on your WordPress theme, this may appear next to the calendar on your website, but not all themes show the calendar description. If you do add a description, then always check that it shows up on your WordPress website.

Finally, you may want to add a color that will appear next to the calendar in your WordPress dashboard. This color-coding can help you group related calendars together, or easily identify a particular calendar.

To add a color, simply click on the ‘Select Color’ switch and then make your selection using the controls that appear.

When you’re happy with the information you’ve entered, click on ‘Add New Calendar’ to go ahead and create your first Sugar Calendar.

You can create multiple calendars simply by repeating the same process described above.

Adding Events in Sugar Calendar

Once you’ve created a calendar, you’re ready to add events to that calendar.

To start, select the ‘Events’ tab and then click on the ‘Add Event’ button.

You can now add all the information about your event, such as date and time, duration, and whether or not it is recurring.

First, you’ll want to go ahead and give the event a name.

Then, add a start time and end date. If the event will last all day, then you can simply check the ‘All-day’ box.

Another option is to set a start and end time, as you can see in the following image.

By default, Sugar Calendar creates all events as one-time events. However, some events are recurring. For example, you might run a webinar every Monday morning or have a monthly meetup for all the volunteers at your nonprofit organization.

To create a recurring event, simply select the ‘Recurrence’ tab, and then choose an option from the ‘Repeat’ dropdown, such as Daily, Weekly, or Monthly.

You can also set an optional ‘End Repeat’ date, which is when the event stops recurring. For example, you might only plan to run webinars until the end of the year.

If you’re organizing an in-person event, then you can also select the ‘Location’ tab and type in where this event will take place.

Next, enter some information about the event in the ‘Details’ box.

This works exactly the same as the WordPress classic editor so you can add images, videos, and formatting.

You can also add a featured image, which will appear on the event’s page. This can make the page more engaging and may also be used in search results and on social media news feeds.

To add a featured image, simply click on ‘Set featured image’ and then either choose an image from the media library or upload a new file.

In the ‘Calendars’ section, find the calendar where you want to add this event.

You can then click to select its radio button.

You can also create a new calendar in this section, simply by clicking on the ‘Add New Calendar’ button.

This adds some settings where you can give the new calendar a name and assign it an optional parent calendar.

Once you’ve entered all the information, just click on the ‘Publish’ button.

You can repeat this process to add more events to the calendar.

Putting Your Events Calendar on Your Website

You can add a calendar to any post or page using shortcode. If you’ve created multiple calendars then visitors can switch between these different calendars using a dropdown.

We’ll add the calendar to a new WordPress page, but the steps will be similar no matter where you’re adding the calendar.

First, go to Pages » Add New in your admin panel. If you want to add it to an existing page, simply click ‘Edit’ under its name on Pages » All Pages.

Then, give your page a title and add any categories and tags that you want to use.

You can then click on the ‘+’ icon to create a new block and type in ‘Shortcode.’ When the right block appears, click on it to add it to the page.

Next, copy the shortcode[sc_events_calendar] into the shortcode block. For more details, please see our guide on how to add a shortcode in WordPress.

You can now publish or update the page to make the calendar live on your website.

To see more information about an event in the calendar, simply click on it.

This will open the event’s page showing the time, date, and any other details.

Sugar Calendar also has a widget that you can add to any widget-ready area of your WordPress theme. This is an easy way to add a calendar to every page of your website or WordPress blog.

The widget also lets you set a default calendar, which will be selected in the dropdown menu. This gives you more control over which events visitors see.

To add a widget in WordPress, simply go to Appearance » Widgets. Here, click on the blue ‘+’ button.

You can then type in ‘Sugar Calendar.’

There are a few different Sugar Calendar widgets, so make sure you select the ‘Event Calendar’ widget.

Now simply drag and drop the widget onto the area where you want to show the calendar.

At this point, you can add an optional title and change the size of the calendar.

To change the default calendar, open the ‘Calendar’ dropdown and then choose an option from the list.

By default, Sugar Calendar will show the current month when the page loads, but you may prefer to show a different month instead. To make this change, simply type a new date into the ‘Default Month & Year’ field.

Once you’re finished, don’t forget to click on the ‘Update’ button. Your Sugar Calendar widget will now show up on your site!

We hope this article helped you learn how to create a simple event calendar with Sugar Calendar. You might also like our article on the best email marketing services and best push notification software, so you can keep your users updated about new events and activities.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post How to Create a Simple Event Calendar with Sugar Calendar first appeared on WPBeginner.

How to Make Google Fonts Privacy Friendly (3 Ways)

Are you concerned about the privacy issues and legal risks of using Google Fonts on your WordPress site?

Google Fonts have been found to breach the EU’s privacy regulations. That means if you have website visitors from Europe, then you may be at risk of paying legal damages.

In this article, we’ll show you how to make Google Fonts privacy friendly in WordPress.

Why Are Google Fonts Not Privacy Friendly?

Your WordPress website’s typography plays an important role in your design and brand identity. That’s why many website owners customize their typography by using Google Fonts.

However, when someone visits a website that uses Google Fonts, their IP address is logged by Google when the fonts are loaded. This is done without their permission and the European Union considers it a breach of privacy regulations.

This means that websites using Google Fonts are no longer GDPR compliant. That’s an important legal consideration if you have website visitors from the European Union because it may make you liable for damages (of course you should consider your legal advisors before taking any action).

With that being said, let’s take a look at how to make Google Fonts privacy friendly. We’ll cover three methods, and you can use the list below to jump to the one you wish to use.

Method 1: Host Google Fonts Locally in WordPress

One way to make Google Fonts privacy friendly is to host them locally in WordPress. Luckily, that’s easy to do by using a plugin.

The first thing you need to do is install and activate the OMGF (Optimize My Google Fonts) plugin. For more details, see our step-by-step guide on how to install a WordPress plugin.

Upon activation, you need to visit Settings » Optimize Google Fonts to configure the plugin. You will see a statement that the default settings will automatically replace your Google Fonts with locally hosted copies.

All you need to do is scroll down the page and make sure that the ‘Font-Display Option’ has the default setting of ‘Swap (recommended)’ selected.

After that, simply click the ‘Save & Optimize’ button at the bottom of the page.

You’ll see a message at the top of the screen that says ‘Optimization completed successfully.’ Your Google Fonts are now hosted locally.

To learn more, see our guide on how to host local fonts in WordPress, including how to do this manually without a plugin.

Method 2: Replace Google Fonts With Bunny Fonts

Bunny Fonts is an alternative to Google Fonts that puts privacy first. Their zero tracking and no-logging policies help you stay fully GDPR compliant. The Bunny Fonts API is fully compatible with the Google Fonts API, and this makes switching simple.

All you need to do is install and activate the Replace Google Fonts with Bunny Fonts plugin. For more details, see our step-by-step guide on how to install a WordPress plugin.

There will be no configuration needed. Once you’ve activated Bunny Fonts, they will immediately replace Google Fonts on your WordPress blog, shop, and every other part of your site.

Method 3: Disable Google Fonts in WordPress

Another way of avoiding the privacy issues of using Google Fonts is to disable them altogether, and simply use the system fonts installed on your users’ computers. We did this when we redesigned the WPBeginner website, and it improved our page load times.

Simply install and activate the Disable and Remove Google Fonts plugin. For more details, see our step-by-step guide on how to install a WordPress plugin.

Upon activation, the plugin will automatically disable all Google Fonts used by your theme and plugins. It doesn’t need to be configured.

Now WordPress will automatically use a default font in place of any Google Fonts that were being used. If you would like to choose different fonts, then see our guide on how to change fonts in your WordPress theme.

You can learn more in our guide on how to disable Google Fonts on your WordPress website.

We hope this tutorial helped you learn how to make Google Fonts privacy friendly. You may also want to learn how to get a free email domain, or check out our list of ways to make money online blogging with WordPress.

If you liked this article, then please subscribe to our YouTube Channel for WordPress video tutorials. You can also find us on Twitter and Facebook.

The post How to Make Google Fonts Privacy Friendly (3 Ways) first appeared on WPBeginner.

Google Ads Latest Update Removes Search Term Data

Imagine checking your Google Ads notifications and seeing this update: Google Ads removes search term data for advertisers.

That happened and it was not a fun experience for any of us. Most advertisers working with smaller budgets not working in a niche or mainly targeting broader more volume-heavy keywords with their search campaigns paid no mind to it.

 

We knew it could mean some important changes are on the way for advertisers like us who handle clients in various niches and that market to people with very specific needs. Specific needs + niche means that the search volume is limited and that meant we could face the effects of this update come September.

Well, September is already here, what did we find?

Before we dive into that, let’s take a look at what actually changed and why Google decided to do this.

On Google’s Search Terms Report support page they state,

“Starting September 2020 [AKA now], the search terms report only includes terms that a significant number of users searched for, even if a term received a click. You may now see fewer terms in your report.”

What Does It Mean When Google Ads Removes Search Term Data?

It means that your beloved Search Terms report that you rely on to derive insights and optimize your campaigns, will start seeing less data show up in it based on the actual volume or the popularity of the search term itself. This is regardless of the fact if the search term results in clicks or conversion for your campaigns.

One more important thing to note here is that the search term in question will be looked at globally. Let us explain:

Search Term A: Relative Popularity = 90

Search Term B: Relative Popularity = 5

Because of this update, Search Term A could only be clicked on once in your Google Ads Search Campaigns and it would show up in the Search Terms Report but Search Term B could be clicked on 30 times but still not make it in the report.

Our Findings:

To determine how the Google update has impacted accounts, we crunched some numbers for one of our clients that has $20,000 monthly spend, and here is what we found: 

99 Robots Excel Chart

Allow us to put into words what you’re seeing.

Before the update, you could lose data on anywhere from 1% to up to 5% of your ad spend. Now after the update went into effect in September, it’s a different story altogether, we’re seeing days where we’re losing 59% of the ad spend data in the Search Terms report.

This is huge, as the search terms report is often looked at when you want to add negatives to the campaigns that do not amount to any conversions. The report helps advertisers everywhere keep a tight leash on their spend and allows them to cut back on wasted ad spend and have them put it towards more valuable keywords that bring in the audience with the right intent and which also converts.

How to See if You’re Affected by This

It’s simple, you need to calculate the visibility of your data, you will calculate the visibility of a specific metric hence the formula will be:

Search Term Visibility = (SUM of [metric] from Search Term Report) / (SUM of [metric] from Search Network Data)

So if you’d like to find out the visibility of the ad spend from your Search Term report then that formula will become:

Search Term Visibility = (SUM of Cost from Search Term Report) / (SUM of Cost from Search Network Data)

What Does This Mean for Advertisers?

We all have methods we employ to weed out the low volume, irrelevant, and poorly performing keywords from our Search campaigns. Now, with this update, a lot of those keywords will fall through the cracks since you will lack visibility on them. Regardless, advertisers like us managing millions in ad spend for our clients will always find ways to combat this and ensure that the conversion data and performance (bottom line) for our clients does not get affected.

Google has already been busy releasing updates and pushing advertisers more towards it’s automated ad products for a while and this is just another nudge from them in that direction where you rely on the machine learning of their algorithm to derive results and keep human intervention in the campaigns to a minimum.

Let us know what you think about this update or reach out to us if your business needs help demystifying the world of PPC.

The post Google Ads Latest Update Removes Search Term Data appeared first on 99 Robots.

How to Backup Your Google Ads

One of the most important things you can do is backup your Google Ads account. Whether big or small, all Google Ads accounts have an exorbitant amount of details that go into making their campaigns successful or just work correctly in the first place. From targeting options to negative lists, placements, bids, locations adjustments, tracking templates, etc. There is too much valuable data on the account for you to just wait for your account to be disapproved and then do something about it.

“But I’ve never had a disapproved account”

“We only advertise for registered reputable businesses so we will never get disapproved”

Okay, how about when a media planner on your team nukes your account? What then? We all know how tedious the Google Ads History feature is, it’ll be almost impossible to revert the account to a previous state when your campaigns were working fine before your intern or junior messed all of it up.

So What’s the Answer… Backup Your Google Ads!

BACKUPS, it’s simple, whether you are an agency or a solopreneur or a freelancer. It is essential that you keep regular backups of the accounts you manage so as to revert back to them in case you have issues with your Google Ads account.

What Do You Need?

For advertisers like us that manage hundreds of accounts, there is only one tool that allows us to create backups of our Google Ads accounts.

Meet the Google Ads Editor.

Google Ads Editor is a free downloadable software from Google that connects to your Google Ads account and allows you to edit your campaigns and manage your accounts as you would through their web platform.

It’s considered a high-level tool with access to more functionality than what you find in the browser version of Google Ads.

We’ll be making use of one such feature here to create backups.

How to Use Google Ads Editor

First, download the Google Ads Editor

Once downloaded; install and open it. You’ll be greeted with the Accounts Manager window.

Here, click on +Add to connect your Gmail account and gain access to your Google Ads accounts.

Once you’re successfully logged in, you would have all of the accounts that you have access to on this screen.

Click on whichever account you want to backup and click Open.

This is where you can make changes to the campaigns, do a lot of bulk edits or even import campaigns from other accounts here.

Note: All changes made to the campaigns (Bids, Targeting, Optimizations, etc) will have to be done and then in order to be made permanent on the account, you would have to click on POST in the top right corner.

Changes made on the account using this tool are not implemented until you click Post.

How to Make Backups

To make backups of your accounts, select ‘Account’ from the menu bar, and choose Export.

Export gives you the option to have 4 types of exports:

Export whole account creates a backup of the entire account.

Export selected campaigns and ad groups create a backup of all the campaigns and ad groups that you select.

Export current view creates a backup of the view in the account explorer, If you have some campaigns filtered based on some rules then this will create a backup of what’s on the screen.

Export custom rules creates a backup of the custom rules that you have set on the account.

Since we’re backing up the entire account, we’ll use Export whole account from the list.

When exporting, it’s important that you select the save as type option to “CSV files with Images in ZIP archives” if you want to see all of the data that is exported.

If you just need the backup to use with the Google Ads Editor and use the Import option here later then the Save as Account archives (.aes) will also work.

The exported zip or the AES file can be imported into the Google Ads Editor for any account that you have access to.

A couple of notes about the zip exports, the images from your display campaigns are not named the same as what you uploaded them as. However, since you’ll be importing them using the entire zip file or AES file into the Google Ads Editor then the software will match them to the right campaign and adgroup so it’s not a cause for concern.

What is Not Covered in the Backup

Pixel data or audience information from the campaigns are not saved in the export, that data still lives on the account and will be called on when you import it into the same account.

In the case of importing the campaigns to a different account that does not have access to that pixeled audience will give you the “Missing or ambiguous audience” error.

How Often Should I Backup

We believe that you should back up your Google Ads account every week to stay up to date with the changes being made on the account, the editor names them for the date the export is made so maintaining them and reverting to a prior state should be very easy.

Now go out there and never lose even a single datum of your Google Ads account.

The post How to Backup Your Google Ads appeared first on 99 Robots.

How to Backup Your Facebook Ads

One of the most important things you can do is to backup your Facebook ads. It’s easy but for some reason, a lot of advertisers and even Facebook itself, don’t really talk much about this very useful feature. Campaign export not only helps you save tons of time but is a great way to work on excel (if for some reason you don’t like the Ads manager). 

One of the reasons why this feature is not discussed as much as other features is probably because beginner or intermediate level advertisers may not use this a lot. 

I disagree with this because if you are a small scale agency working with small ad accounts (spending anywhere between $500-$5000/mo), you would still be interested in learning how to export and import campaigns. Now, why do I say this? 

Let’s assume you’re running ads for a Chinese restaurant that has many franchises or branches across the country. Instead of running all their campaigns under one account, you would obviously want to segregate the budget, campaign, and targeting, etc for administrative purposes (even though you are running the same ads). 

The export-import option here lets you duplicate the entire account structure from one ad account to another and I’m going to tell you exactly how this is done below. 

How to Backup Your Facebook Ads from Any Ad Account 

Step 1 

Go inside your Facebook ads manager and select the campaign you want to export, once that this done and you’ve selected the ad sets and ads inside, then click the export-import button and hit ‘Selected’. See the screenshot below. 

Step 2

Once you have clicked on selected, another window will appear, here select ‘export as CSV’ 

After you have exported the data, the exported file should look something like this below. 

Notice how this file will have everything related to the campaign that you were running. 

Here are some of the important settings/data this file contains: 

Campaigns, ad sets, and ad names 
Budgets and schedule 
Audiences and targeting 
Optimization and other ad set settings 
Placement details 
Ad level data including ad copy, headline, destination links, and CTA
UTM parameters

Now you can save all this data on your cloud storage or anywhere safe and come back to analyze or view campaign settings for this particular account OR you may use this file to duplicate the exact same campaign and ads on another account. 

Let me quickly tell you how that is done in the next section. 

There are a number of reasons why everyone should be able to back up their Facebook data and all the juice that runs inside the ads manager. 

You may want to back up this important data for one of the following reasons: 

Saving data as security and backup (in case of account or business manager ban) 
Helps in transferring campaigns and ads in bulk across ad accounts (if you’re running the same ads through different ad accounts) 
If you want to quickly send over an ad or campaign approval to your clients (not the best way to get your ads approved but certainly the quickest)! 

For whatever reasons you want to backup, saving that important data is crucial as it may save you thousands of dollars in the testing budget in the future. 

So in this blog post, I am going to share a few tips and tricks that will help you backup your Facebook ads effectively and efficiently. 

How to Import Facebook Ads to Another Ad Account 

Now this is super simple to execute, once you’ve shared all the audiences to account #02, you’re simply going to take the file you exported and import that using the same import-export option. 

Once you select Import >> Ads, here’s what you will see 

You will simply upload the same file you initially exported and hit on ‘import’ and boom!

All your campaign settings, ad set settings, and most importantly, ads will be exported to the new account!  

Quick Hack: How to Import Deleted Campaigns and Ads 

Facebook would give you some sort of error if you try to import a file that contains deleted campaigns or ad sets. 

To go around this error, here’s a quick tip. 

Once you’ve downloaded the CSV file, open and start editing and get rid of the following columns (note delete the data inside the columns but let the headlines of the columns stay as is). 

Here’s what you want to delete: 

Campaign ID and campaign status 
Ad set ID and ad set status 
Ad ID and ad status 

Just get rid of the data (highlighted above and the ad id and ad status). Once that is done, save the file and then upload it to another ads manager and it will successfully duplicate the campaign. 

How to Backup Facebook Campaign Results and Stats

Now, we have learned how to export the campaign settings but let’s find out how we can export and save results and statistics. 

Step 1 

Line up the metrics you want to export, we usually have as many metrics as we want including the most important ones. 

Step 2 

Click on reports > export table data… 

Step 3

Select the file type you want to export and also select ‘include summary row’ and hit on export. 

Once you’ve exported the data, the saved file will look something like this 

This includes all the metrics that you saved on the columns inside the ads manager, data depends on the date range selected. 

You can also include campaign and ad data of deleted items on the file. 

What is Not Covered in the Facebook Backup? 

Pixel data or audiences are not covered in backup, the backup is really to save your campaign data and the actual ads and their permalinks. 

To save pixel data, you can either share audiences with other accounts, share the actual pixel, or the old school way of keeping all your customers in a CSV file and uploading it whenever needed to create custom and lookalike audiences. 

How Often Should you Backup your Account? 

Facebook ads and ads manager have in recent times been unpredictable. We recommend you backup your Facebook ads once a week or if it’s not possible then at least once every month. This ensures that you never lose access to important data and settings and most importantly proof of work you’re doing on your or your clients’ accounts!

The post How to Backup Your Facebook Ads appeared first on 99 Robots.