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Showing posts with the label cookieconsent

How Shopify Retargeting Works (With Privacy Compliance Tips)

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  Retargeting helps you reach people who visited your Shopify store but did not buy. It shows them ads or sends them emails to bring them back. When done right, it turns window shoppers into paying customers. Here is how it works. When someone visits your store, a small piece of code tracks what they do. It notes which pages they view, what items they add to cart, and when they leave. This data helps you understand their interest. Then you show them targeted ads on Facebook, Instagram, or Google. If they looked at running shoes, they see ads for running shoes. If they left items in cart, they get a reminder. The message matches their behavior. But there is a catch. Privacy laws now require you to ask permission before tracking people. You need a clear cookie banner that lets visitors choose. If they say no, you cannot track them. Many stores lose tracking because their banners are confusing or hidden. Seers Cookie Consent makes this easy. It adds a proper banner to your Sh...

Common Cookie Errors on WordPress & Shopify

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  Adding a cookie banner to your WordPress or Shopify store isn't just a legal checkbox — if poorly implemented, it can ruin UX, hurt sales, and leave you non-compliant. Here are the most common mistakes found on both platforms: 1. Cookies Fire Before Consent Plugins or apps often load trackers before user consent. This violates GDPR, CCPA, and other data laws — exposing your site to fines. 2. Mobile Display Failures On Shopify and WordPress themes, banners sometimes block login buttons, checkout forms, or hide navigation bars — especially on mobile. This can directly impact conversion rates. 3. Ignoring Geo-Targeted Laws Each region (EU, UK, California, Brazil) has different cookie consent requirements. A single static banner for all users isn’t enough. 4. Language Mismatch Your store or site may be multilingual, but your cookie banner isn’t. This causes distrust and confusion among global visitors. 5. Lack of Consent Logging Failing to store consent logs means you can’t prove com...