Every day people land on your website, browse for a minute, and leave without doing the one thing you needed them to do. Not because they weren't interested. Because your most important message was buried where nobody looks. A popup fixes that.
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Think about the last time you updated your homepage banner. Maybe you put up a promotion. Maybe you flagged an important deadline. You built the thing, published it, and moved on.
And your visitors? They landed on the page. Their eye went straight past the banner to the content below it. They read a bit. They thought about getting in touch. Then something else happened and they left.
This is not a traffic problem. It is an attention problem. Static content competes for attention with everything else on the page. Your banner has to fight your navigation, your hero image, your opening paragraph, and the general visual noise of a page built to show multiple things at once. Most visitors process a fraction of what's in front of them before they make a decision. If your message is in that banner, it is probably in the fraction they skip.
A popup does not compete. It arrives. It carries one message. It gives the visitor one thing to read and one thing to do. Then it gets out of the way. That is the entire mechanism. Simple, direct, and effective precisely because it doesn't ask the visitor to do the work of finding what you want them to see.
Engagement Bods does one job and does it without getting in the way.
Whatever you need to say. An offer, a notice, an update. No templates. No character cap.
One page, a group of pages, or the whole site. The right message in the right place.
Immediate or after a delay. Every visit or once per session. You control when it shows up and how frequently.
Make the popup clickable. One tap takes the visitor straight to your booking form, product page, or contact page.
Desktop popups sit bottom left or right. Mobile popups sit top or bottom. Visitors on mobile can dismiss it.
One line of code in your website. After that, everything runs from your account. Never touch the code again.
A popup is useful wherever you have a website and something time-sensitive or important to communicate. Here is what that looks like in practice.
You have a sale running for 72 hours. The offer is on the homepage. It's in the hero banner. It's on the category page headers. And most visitors scroll straight past all of it to get to the products they came for.
A popup on the homepage and category pages, appearing after a few seconds, saying the offer ends in 72 hours and linking directly to the sale page, gives the offer one more shot at being noticed. When the sale ends, you turn the popup off. No redesign. You switch it off in your account and it is gone.
You run a consultancy, a clinic, an agency, or a trade business. You have spaces right now. New clients can book immediately. Where does a visitor find that out? Probably buried in a contact page they may never reach.
A homepage popup that says "Currently taking on new clients this month. Get in touch today." costs nothing to write and takes thirty seconds to set up. It tells every visitor the one thing that might make the difference between them contacting you and going to a competitor instead.
Your specials change. Your availability changes. You have a set menu running this month or a wine evening next week. These are things that could genuinely influence a visitor's decision to book, but they tend to sit in a news section or social post that website visitors never see.
A popup on your homepage or reservations page, carrying the current offer, updates the moment you change it in your account. Every visitor sees the current situation rather than whatever was accurate when the page was last redesigned.
You have an event. Tickets are available. Some are going fast. The listing is on your events page, which gets less traffic than your homepage. A site-wide popup that says tickets are available and links directly to the booking page means every visitor to your site knows about it, not just the ones who navigate to the events section.
Membership sites often run joining offers or close registration windows. Both are time-sensitive and need to reach as many visitors as possible within a short window. A popup carrying the deadline and linking directly to the signup form removes every extra step between visitor and action.
You've moved. You've changed your opening hours. You're closed for two weeks. A key team member has joined or left. These are things your website visitors need to know before they turn up in the wrong place, call a number nobody answers, or make a decision based on outdated information.
A site-wide popup that appears on every page immediately, carrying the relevant update, means every visitor sees it before they see anything else. No phone calls. No negative reviews from people who didn't know.
Not because those tools are useless. Because none of them guarantee your message gets seen by the visitor who is on your site right now.
| Method | Travels with visitor? | Page-specific targeting? | Instant message update? | Reaches non-followers? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Homepage banner | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Sticky header bar | Yes | Limited | Yes | Yes |
| Blog or news article | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Social media post | No | No | Yes | No |
| Engagement Bods popup | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
A homepage banner relies on the visitor noticing it among everything else competing for attention. Social media only reaches your existing followers. A sticky bar travels with the visitor but becomes visual wallpaper within seconds and can't carry a different message to different pages. A popup reaches every visitor, on the page that's relevant to them, with a message you change instantly. None of the alternatives can do all four.
Every setting is yours to change, any time, from your account. Changes go live immediately.
Write exactly what you need. Short messages work best but there is no enforced limit.
Set the delay between page load and popup appearance. Zero for urgent messages, a few seconds for promotional ones.
Every visit, once per session, or once per visitor. You choose how many times each person sees it.
Set how long it stays on screen. Long enough to read, not so long it gets in the way.
Font, font colour, and visual styling. Match your website brand or keep it clean and simple.
Bottom left or right on desktop. Top or bottom on mobile. Always at the edge, never blocking content.
Link the popup anywhere. One click from message to action with no extra steps in between.
Show on one page, a set of pages, or site-wide. The right message stays in the right place.
Create as many as you need. Run them at the same time. There is no cap.
Mobile visitors can close the popup with one tap. It never traps them or blocks the screen.
You will never need to touch the code again after installation.
</body> tag. On WordPress, a free plugin called "Insert Headers and Footers" lets you do this without touching any code files.If a developer or agency manages your website, forward them the code. It is a five-minute task and should cost nothing extra under any standard maintenance arrangement.
Two options. Neither requires a commitment you can't walk away from.
Monthly
per month
Pay month to month. Cancel any time.
Best value
Annual
per year (£1.25/month)
Pay once for the year. Cancel any time.
No free trial · No setup fee · No minimum contract · Unlimited popups on both plans
Every minute people are on your website deciding whether to buy, book, register, or get in touch. Most of them are leaving without seeing your most important message. Not because they don't care. Because nothing on the page made sure they saw it. A popup does that. It costs £1.49 a month. It takes an afternoon to set up. Stop leaving visitors to find your message on their own.
Get started from £1.49/monthNo free trial · No minimum contract · Cancel any time