A ‘petition’ action is the simplest type of advocacy page and is used when you want to get your supporters to sign up to a statement or a campaign. They are different from email-to-target advocacy pages in that they do not target anyone. Instead the supporters’ data is recorded so you use it to hand in their names or to communicate with them at a later date.
Summary of the steps
Here is a summary of the steps we’ll be going through, which you can also use as a reminder if you have created one before. Click Next at the bottom of this page to get a detailed explanation of each step.
- Create your petition page. Create from scratch or duplicate an existing page
- Update your page settings. Determine what template to use
- Add the content of your page. Add text, form fields, buttons and a target block.
- Test and launch your campaign!
Create your petition page
To create a new campaign, you can either duplicate a petition or create a new one from scratch.
To create a brand new page, go to Pages > Manage Pages and click . You will be shown a variety of different pages you can make:
Click on “Petition” and click Next. You will be taken to the settings page which you can read about on the next step.
Duplicating an existing campaign
Alternatively you can duplicate an existing page you have previously created. To do this, go to your list of campaigns (by clicking on Pages > Manage pages in the menu) and next to the one you wish to duplicate, click the button under the “Dup” column It will ask you for a new name (the box may further down the screen so you might need to scroll). Enter this and click Duplicate.
Click the settings icon in the toolbar and go to the next step.
Update the page settings
You can also access this screen later on via the settings icon
The following fields can be completed:
- Name: This is the reference name of your page for your own purposes (the supporter won’t see this). It is a good idea to come up with a naming convention so you can keep track of your campaigns, which is especially useful when using the query builder. For example, “2017-01 Ocean MP action”
- Public title: This field is the public name of your page. You can reveal this by using page tags.
- Status: By default, pages are “New” until you are ready to launch them. New means that the live URL is not available until you set the status to “Live”. You can also close pages here.
- Base URL: The Base URL is the first part of the address of your page (the domain). Unless you have changed the default Base URL in your account preferences, this will be engagingnetworks.app. For more about the Base URL, click here.
- Notes: Any notes you want to add, type in here. This is for internal use and isn’t visible to supporters.
- Closed landing page and Error landing page: read more here.
- Address lookup: US Only – this allows you to validate addresses using postal code mapping.
- Language: You can optionally add the ability to have different locales for your page, so that text blocks, forms and so on show different versions depending on the browser language.
- Template: The template determines how your page looks – the header and footer, as well as fonts, colours and so on. For more about templates, click here.
- Attributes: You can optionally catergorise your page according to Attributes.
Once you click next, you can optionally set notification settings which will can send you an email when a supporter completes the page. Click Save and the admin screen will close, showing you the Page Builder itself.
Add the content of your page
Once you have completed your page’s settings, you will be taken to the page editor which allows you to add content such as text and form fields to your campaign.
This editor is “WYSIWYG”, and shows how your page will look once it is live, allowing you edit the page by dragging in components, and hovering over them to edit them or move them around.
Pages
Note that you are on “Page 1” initially. You can have several pages, allowing the supporter to step through the campaign step-by-step. You can navigate between pages using the “Page 1, Page 2” buttons at the top. A common set-up for petition pages is:
Page 1
- Two-column row
- Left column – a Text block explaining what the campaign is about
- Right column – a form for the supporter to add their name and perhaps also their address, including an opt-in question and button
Page 2
- One-column row
- Text block saying thanks to the supporter
- Social share buttons


When you add new pages, you have a choice of adding a standard page, or to link to another campaign (pre-populating any fields) or a redirection to your website:
Rows
Rows hold the content of your page, and can be one or two column. You can only drag components into “rows”, shown as a white box with a dotted border in the screenshot above. For more about rows, click here.
The toolbar
By hovering over the toolbar on the right
Components
To add a design element to your page layout, click on the name of the tool to show which items are available. Once you have identified the item you’d like to add to your page, click and drag it into the layout. A common component is the “text block”, for example, which allows you to add formatted text to your page, and a “form block” that allows you to add form fields and questions, such as email address or an opt-in checkbox, as well as the submit button. For more about components, click here.
You may also want to include social sharing buttons, allowing the supporter to share your campaign by Facebook, Twitter or Google+.
Also consider whether you wish to add an automated thank you email – to do this, go to auto responders in the toolbar. More here.
Save, save, save…
Remember to continually Save your page as you add components and edit them
Test and launch your campaign!
Test your pages
Click the orange “Done” button
You can then view the page as if it were live by clicking the Preview button
Note: If you have created versions for different locales or profiles, you will be able to view them via the preview button.
Make it live
Once you are happy it is working correctly, you can change the status from New to Live. To do this, click the admin button
In the Page Builder list of pages, you can then click on the name of your page to view the live URL.
Under “Published URLs” you can see the URL of your page. Click “Add tracking” to add different versions of this URL for use on other channels, such as your website, in emails, or on Facebook. Then you can easily see how people come to see your page.
Once it has been running for a while, you can click “View quick report” to see how your action is doing, or look at the visual reporting for more details.