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Ouibounce

tests twitter gittip

A small library enabling you to display a modal before a user leaves your website.

Quick note: Let me know if you end up using Ouibounce. I'd love to hear about your project / see Ouibounce in the wild :)

The philosophy behind this project

This library helps you increase landing page conversion rates. From my experience, you can expect a lift of 7% to 15% depending on your audience, traffic type (paid or unpaid) and copy.

Talking about copy... please use Ouibounce to provide value to your visitors. With tools like these it's very easy to create something spammy-looking.

Not sure what I mean by provide value? Here are a few ideas to get your creative juices flowing:

Demo / Examples

Installation

Download the minified or unminified script and include it on your page. Ouibounce is wrapped by a umd wrapper, so if you are using requirejs/amd or commonjs/browserify, it will still work fine.

You can also get Ouibounce from cdnjs.com.

Usage

  1. Create a hidden modal
  2. Select the modal with vanilla JavaScript (or jQuery) and call ouibounce
  3. Optional: Save the function's return value to use the public API, allowing you to fire or disable Ouibounce on demand

Example:

ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'));

Example with jQuery:

ouibounce($('#ouibounce-modal')[0]);

Example using the public api:

var modal = ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'));
modal.fire()

Options

Ouibounce offers a few options, such as:

Sensitivity

Ouibounce fires when the mouse cursor moves close to (or passes) the top of the viewport. You can define how far the mouse has to be before Ouibounce fires. The higher value, the more sensitive, and the more quickly the event will fire. Defaults to 20.

Example:

ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'), { sensitivity: 40 });
Aggressive mode

By default, Ouibounce will only fire once for each visitor. When Ouibounce fires, a cookie is created to ensure a non obtrusive experience.

There are cases, however, when you may want to be more aggressive (as in, you want the modal to be elegible to fire anytime the page is loaded/ reloaded). An example use-case might be on your paid landing pages. If you enable aggressive, the modal will fire any time the page is reloaded, for the same user.

Example:

ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'), { aggressive: true });
Set a min time before Ouibounce fires

By default, Ouibounce won't fire in the first second to prevent false positives, as it's unlikely the user will be able to exit the page within less than a second. If you want to change the amount of time that firing is surpressed for, you can pass in a number of milliseconds to timer.

Example:

ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'), { timer: 0 });
Callback

You can add a callback, which is a function that will run once Ouibounce has been triggered, by using the callback option.

Example:

ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'), { callback: function() { console.log('Ouibounce fired!'); } });
Cookie expiration

Ouibounce sets a cookie by default to prevent the modal from appearing more than once per user. You can add a cookie expiration (in days) using cookieExpire to adjust the time period before the modal will appear again for a user. By default, the cookie will expire at the end of the session, which for most browsers is when the browser is closed entirely.

Example:

ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'), { cookieExpire: 10 });
Cookie domain

Ouibounce sets a cookie by default to prevent the modal from appearing more than once per user. You can add a cookie domain using cookieDomain to specify the domain under which the cookie should work. By default, no extra domain information will be added. If you need a cookie to work also in your subdomain (like blog.example.com and example.com), then set a cookieDomain such as .example.com (notice the dot in front).

Example:

ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'), { cookieDomain:
'.example.com' });
Sitewide cookie

You can drop sitewide cookies by using passing sitewide: true.

Example:

ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'), { sitewide: true });
Chaining options

The options are just javascript objects, you can therefore combine multiple options.

Example:

ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'), {
  aggressive: true,
  sitewide: true,
  cookieDomain: '.example.com',
  timer: 0,
  callback: function() { console.log('ouibounce fired!'); }
});

Ouibounce API

If you save the object returned by the ouibounce function, you get access to a small public API. Use this API to fire or disable Ouibounce on demand.

Example:

var modal = ouibounce(document.getElementById('ouibounce-modal'));
modal.fire(); // fire the ouibounce event
modal.disable() // disable ouibounce, it will not fire on page exit
modal.disable({ cookieExpire: 50, sitewide: true }) // disable ouibounce sitewide for 50 days. 
Disable options

The disable function accepts a few options:

Using Ouibounce with other libraries

If you want to use this library with other plugins — such as Vex — you can call ouibounce with false. See #30 for discussion.

var _ouibounce = ouibounce(false, {
  callback: function() { console.log('ouibounce fired!'); }
});

Legacy JS engines

If you'd like Ouibounce to work in legacy JS engines (IE8 and below, for example), you'll need to add a shim such as es5-shim.

Miscellaneous

Analytics

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