Project Status Update
A note from the SnapForms team: Due to a serious family matter that requires our full attention, active development and […]
Read our articles for a more comprehensive of the various aspects in which the SnapForms plugin may enhance your WordPress website.
A note from the SnapForms team: Due to a serious family matter that requires our full attention, active development and […]
Email notifications in WordPress forms are often treated as a convenience feature. In reality, they are part of the system’s correctness model. This article examines why email delivery, sender separation, triggers, dynamic content, and logging must be designed as first-class system components — and how fragile architectures turn “working” forms into silent failures.
Most WordPress form plugins implement conditional logic as a visibility toggle, supported by a single set of AND-based rules.
This limits what can be expressed and leads to brittle, incorrect behavior in real-world forms.
SnapForms introduces condition groups with both AND and OR logic, applying them consistently across visibility and requiredness to model complex decision paths without custom code.
Modern marketing is built on measurement. Campaigns are tagged, funnels are optimized, and budgets are shifted based on performance data and ROI. Yet, despite all this effort, attribution often breaks at the most critical moment: when a user actually converts. With the current online channel diversity, this is not acceptable. Learn how SnapForms provides insightful analytics.
Data loss in WordPress forms is not an accidental edge case — it’s a design flaw. It’s the predictable outcome of systems that treat form structures as disposable. This article examines real-world incidents, their root causes, and how SnapForms uses version control to prevent silent data corruption before it endangers businesses and organizations.
You can’t bolt GDPR onto WordPress with a checkbox.
Compliance depends on how personal data is processed, secured, accessed, and erased — not on what the user clicks.
When architecture ignores these obligations, good intentions quickly turn into regulatory exposure.
Encryption is no longer a “nice-to-have” feature — it’s one of the only defenses standing between an organization and catastrophic data exposure. Modern attacks move fast, exploit anything they can find, and often bypass traditional security layers. When everything else fails, encryption is the barrier that decides whether stolen data becomes a headline—or a useless pile of scrambled nonsense.