Posts by ThriveTracker

Feature of the Month: Lazy Loading Pixels

Posted By ThriveTracker on Apr 23 2019

Lazy loading – deferring loading objects until they are needed – is becoming more common given it increases the efficiency of websites by only loading content that the visitor will actually view. This means that the content above the fold of the page will be the only content to load. Anything below that fold will…

Feature of the Month: Rev-Share

Posted By ThriveTracker on Mar 21 2019

As of this week, our brand new rev-share feature has gone live. This incredible tool has many uses and benefits, especially for those of you who work in teams and want increased privacy regarding your revenue. Setting up offers in Thrive using our rev-share rules allows our clients to reduce the visible revenue amount by…

Top 5 Ways to Organize ThriveTracker for Long-Term Success

Posted By ThriveTracker on Mar 7 2019

Organizing your tracker is key to running successful campaigns and increasing your profit. Here at ThriveTracker, we provide you with as many organizational tools as possible to position you for success. While the possibilities are endless, we’ve identified our top 5 favorite ways to organize within Thrive. Check out the tips below!   1. Label Items…

Feature of the Month: Bot Filters

Posted By ThriveTracker on Feb 1 2019

With such a diverse, exciting array of features on the ThriveTracker platform, we have decided to institute a monthly blog to highlight some of our favorites… welcome to our first feature! This month’s focus? Bot filters. Why? Because they give you the freedom to redirect traffic where you want it and identify smarter buying optimizations…

Thriving Partnerships: UF Brings ThriveTracker into the Classroom

Posted By ThriveTracker on Jan 25 2019

“If you imagine a product as the human body, the bones represent the code which gives it structure. The organs represent the UX design: measuring and optimizing against input for supporting life functions. And UI design represents the cosmetics of the body–its presentation, its senses, and reactions.” – Emil Lamprecht User Experience Design: something all of us…