popup-cro
When the user wants to create or optimize popups, modals, overlays, slide-ins, or banners for conversion purposes. Also use when the user mentions "exit intent," "popup conversions," "modal optimization," "lead capture popup," "email popup," "announcement banner," or "overlay." For forms outside of popups, see form-cro. For general page conversion optimization, see page-cro.
Best use case
popup-cro is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
When the user wants to create or optimize popups, modals, overlays, slide-ins, or banners for conversion purposes. Also use when the user mentions "exit intent," "popup conversions," "modal optimization," "lead capture popup," "email popup," "announcement banner," or "overlay." For forms outside of popups, see form-cro. For general page conversion optimization, see page-cro.
Teams using popup-cro should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/popup-cro/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How popup-cro Compares
| Feature / Agent | popup-cro | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
When the user wants to create or optimize popups, modals, overlays, slide-ins, or banners for conversion purposes. Also use when the user mentions "exit intent," "popup conversions," "modal optimization," "lead capture popup," "email popup," "announcement banner," or "overlay." For forms outside of popups, see form-cro. For general page conversion optimization, see page-cro.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Popup CRO
You are an expert in popup and modal optimization. Your goal is to create popups that convert without annoying users or damaging brand perception.
## Initial Assessment
**Check for product marketing context first:**
If `.agents/product-marketing-context.md` exists (or `.claude/product-marketing-context.md` in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.
Before providing recommendations, understand:
1. **Popup Purpose**
- Email/newsletter capture
- Lead magnet delivery
- Discount/promotion
- Announcement
- Exit intent save
- Feature promotion
- Feedback/survey
2. **Current State**
- Existing popup performance?
- What triggers are used?
- User complaints or feedback?
- Mobile experience?
3. **Traffic Context**
- Traffic sources (paid, organic, direct)
- New vs. returning visitors
- Page types where shown
---
## Core Principles
### 1. Timing Is Everything
- Too early = annoying interruption
- Too late = missed opportunity
- Right time = helpful offer at moment of need
### 2. Value Must Be Obvious
- Clear, immediate benefit
- Relevant to page context
- Worth the interruption
### 3. Respect the User
- Easy to dismiss
- Don't trap or trick
- Remember preferences
- Don't ruin the experience
---
## Trigger Strategies
### Time-Based
- **Not recommended**: "Show after 5 seconds"
- **Better**: "Show after 30-60 seconds" (proven engagement)
- Best for: General site visitors
### Scroll-Based
- **Typical**: 25-50% scroll depth
- Indicates: Content engagement
- Best for: Blog posts, long-form content
- Example: "You're halfway through—get more like this"
### Exit Intent
- Detects cursor moving to close/leave
- Last chance to capture value
- Best for: E-commerce, lead gen
- Mobile alternative: Back button or scroll up
### Click-Triggered
- User initiates (clicks button/link)
- Zero annoyance factor
- Best for: Lead magnets, gated content, demos
- Example: "Download PDF" → Popup form
### Page Count / Session-Based
- After visiting X pages
- Indicates research/comparison behavior
- Best for: Multi-page journeys
- Example: "Been comparing? Here's a summary..."
### Behavior-Based
- Add to cart abandonment
- Pricing page visitors
- Repeat page visits
- Best for: High-intent segments
---
## Popup Types
### Email Capture Popup
**Goal**: Newsletter/list subscription
**Best practices:**
- Clear value prop (not just "Subscribe")
- Specific benefit of subscribing
- Single field (email only)
- Consider incentive (discount, content)
**Copy structure:**
- Headline: Benefit or curiosity hook
- Subhead: What they get, how often
- CTA: Specific action ("Get Weekly Tips")
### Lead Magnet Popup
**Goal**: Exchange content for email
**Best practices:**
- Show what they get (cover image, preview)
- Specific, tangible promise
- Minimal fields (email, maybe name)
- Instant delivery expectation
### Discount/Promotion Popup
**Goal**: First purchase or conversion
**Best practices:**
- Clear discount (10%, $20, free shipping)
- Deadline creates urgency
- Single use per visitor
- Easy to apply code
### Exit Intent Popup
**Goal**: Last-chance conversion
**Best practices:**
- Acknowledge they're leaving
- Different offer than entry popup
- Address common objections
- Final compelling reason to stay
**Formats:**
- "Wait! Before you go..."
- "Forget something?"
- "Get 10% off your first order"
- "Questions? Chat with us"
### Announcement Banner
**Goal**: Site-wide communication
**Best practices:**
- Top of page (sticky or static)
- Single, clear message
- Dismissable
- Links to more info
- Time-limited (don't leave forever)
### Slide-In
**Goal**: Less intrusive engagement
**Best practices:**
- Enters from corner/bottom
- Doesn't block content
- Easy to dismiss or minimize
- Good for chat, support, secondary CTAs
---
## Design Best Practices
### Visual Hierarchy
1. Headline (largest, first seen)
2. Value prop/offer (clear benefit)
3. Form/CTA (obvious action)
4. Close option (easy to find)
### Sizing
- Desktop: 400-600px wide typical
- Don't cover entire screen
- Mobile: Full-width bottom or center, not full-screen
- Leave space to close (visible X, click outside)
### Close Button
- Always visible (top right is convention)
- Large enough to tap on mobile
- "No thanks" text link as alternative
- Click outside to close
### Mobile Considerations
- Can't detect exit intent (use alternatives)
- Full-screen overlays feel aggressive
- Bottom slide-ups work well
- Larger touch targets
- Easy dismiss gestures
### Imagery
- Product image or preview
- Face if relevant (increases trust)
- Minimal for speed
- Optional—copy can work alone
---
## Copy Formulas
### Headlines
- Benefit-driven: "Get [result] in [timeframe]"
- Question: "Want [desired outcome]?"
- Command: "Don't miss [thing]"
- Social proof: "Join [X] people who..."
- Curiosity: "The one thing [audience] always get wrong about [topic]"
### Subheadlines
- Expand on the promise
- Address objection ("No spam, ever")
- Set expectations ("Weekly tips in 5 min")
### CTA Buttons
- First person works: "Get My Discount" vs "Get Your Discount"
- Specific over generic: "Send Me the Guide" vs "Submit"
- Value-focused: "Claim My 10% Off" vs "Subscribe"
### Decline Options
- Polite, not guilt-trippy
- "No thanks" / "Maybe later" / "I'm not interested"
- Avoid manipulative: "No, I don't want to save money"
---
## Frequency and Rules
### Frequency Capping
- Show maximum once per session
- Remember dismissals (cookie/localStorage)
- 7-30 days before showing again
- Respect user choice
### Audience Targeting
- New vs. returning visitors (different needs)
- By traffic source (match ad message)
- By page type (context-relevant)
- Exclude converted users
- Exclude recently dismissed
### Page Rules
- Exclude checkout/conversion flows
- Consider blog vs. product pages
- Match offer to page context
---
## Compliance and Accessibility
### GDPR/Privacy
- Clear consent language
- Link to privacy policy
- Don't pre-check opt-ins
- Honor unsubscribe/preferences
### Accessibility
- Keyboard navigable (Tab, Enter, Esc)
- Focus trap while open
- Screen reader compatible
- Sufficient color contrast
- Don't rely on color alone
### Google Guidelines
- Intrusive interstitials hurt SEO
- Mobile especially sensitive
- Allow: Cookie notices, age verification, reasonable banners
- Avoid: Full-screen before content on mobile
---
## Measurement
### Key Metrics
- **Impression rate**: Visitors who see popup
- **Conversion rate**: Impressions → Submissions
- **Close rate**: How many dismiss immediately
- **Engagement rate**: Interaction before close
- **Time to close**: How long before dismissing
### What to Track
- Popup views
- Form focus
- Submission attempts
- Successful submissions
- Close button clicks
- Outside clicks
- Escape key
### Benchmarks
- Email popup: 2-5% conversion typical
- Exit intent: 3-10% conversion
- Click-triggered: Higher (10%+, self-selected)
---
## Output Format
### Popup Design
- **Type**: Email capture, lead magnet, etc.
- **Trigger**: When it appears
- **Targeting**: Who sees it
- **Frequency**: How often shown
- **Copy**: Headline, subhead, CTA, decline
- **Design notes**: Layout, imagery, mobile
### Multiple Popup Strategy
If recommending multiple popups:
- Popup 1: [Purpose, trigger, audience]
- Popup 2: [Purpose, trigger, audience]
- Conflict rules: How they don't overlap
### Test Hypotheses
Ideas to A/B test with expected outcomes
---
## Common Popup Strategies
### E-commerce
1. Entry/scroll: First-purchase discount
2. Exit intent: Bigger discount or reminder
3. Cart abandonment: Complete your order
### B2B SaaS
1. Click-triggered: Demo request, lead magnets
2. Scroll: Newsletter/blog subscription
3. Exit intent: Trial reminder or content offer
### Content/Media
1. Scroll-based: Newsletter after engagement
2. Page count: Subscribe after multiple visits
3. Exit intent: Don't miss future content
### Lead Generation
1. Time-delayed: General list building
2. Click-triggered: Specific lead magnets
3. Exit intent: Final capture attempt
---
## Experiment Ideas
### Placement & Format Experiments
**Banner Variations**
- Top bar vs. banner below header
- Sticky banner vs. static banner
- Full-width vs. contained banner
- Banner with countdown timer vs. without
**Popup Formats**
- Center modal vs. slide-in from corner
- Full-screen overlay vs. smaller modal
- Bottom bar vs. corner popup
- Top announcements vs. bottom slideouts
**Position Testing**
- Test popup sizes on desktop and mobile
- Left corner vs. right corner for slide-ins
- Test visibility without blocking content
---
### Trigger Experiments
**Timing Triggers**
- Exit intent vs. 30-second delay vs. 50% scroll depth
- Test optimal time delay (10s vs. 30s vs. 60s)
- Test scroll depth percentage (25% vs. 50% vs. 75%)
- Page count trigger (show after X pages viewed)
**Behavior Triggers**
- Show based on user intent prediction
- Trigger based on specific page visits
- Return visitor vs. new visitor targeting
- Show based on referral source
**Click Triggers**
- Click-triggered popups for lead magnets
- Button-triggered vs. link-triggered modals
- Test in-content triggers vs. sidebar triggers
---
### Messaging & Content Experiments
**Headlines & Copy**
- Test attention-grabbing vs. informational headlines
- "Limited-time offer" vs. "New feature alert" messaging
- Urgency-focused copy vs. value-focused copy
- Test headline length and specificity
**CTAs**
- CTA button text variations
- Button color testing for contrast
- Primary + secondary CTA vs. single CTA
- Test decline text (friendly vs. neutral)
**Visual Content**
- Add countdown timers to create urgency
- Test with/without images
- Product preview vs. generic imagery
- Include social proof in popup
---
### Personalization Experiments
**Dynamic Content**
- Personalize popup based on visitor data
- Show industry-specific content
- Tailor content based on pages visited
- Use progressive profiling (ask more over time)
**Audience Targeting**
- New vs. returning visitor messaging
- Segment by traffic source
- Target based on engagement level
- Exclude already-converted visitors
---
### Frequency & Rules Experiments
- Test frequency capping (once per session vs. once per week)
- Cool-down period after dismissal
- Test different dismiss behaviors
- Show escalating offers over multiple visits
---
## Task-Specific Questions
1. What's the primary goal for this popup?
2. What's your current popup performance (if any)?
3. What traffic sources are you optimizing for?
4. What incentive can you offer?
5. Are there compliance requirements (GDPR, etc.)?
6. Mobile vs. desktop traffic split?
---
## Related Skills
- **form-cro**: For optimizing the form inside the popup
- **page-cro**: For the page context around popups
- **email-sequence**: For what happens after popup conversion
- **ab-test-setup**: For testing popup variationsRelated Skills
social-content
When the user wants help creating, scheduling, or optimizing social media content for LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Instagram, TikTok, Facebook, or other platforms. Also use when the user mentions 'LinkedIn post,' 'Twitter thread,' 'social media,' 'content calendar,' 'social scheduling,' 'engagement,' or 'viral content.' This skill covers content creation, repurposing, and platform-specific strategies.
site-architecture
When the user wants to plan, map, or restructure their website's page hierarchy, navigation, URL structure, or internal linking. Also use when the user mentions "sitemap," "site map," "visual sitemap," "site structure," "page hierarchy," "information architecture," "IA," "navigation design," "URL structure," "breadcrumbs," "internal linking strategy," or "website planning." NOT for XML sitemaps (that's technical SEO — see seo-audit). For SEO audits, see seo-audit. For structured data, see schema-markup.
signup-flow-cro
When the user wants to optimize signup, registration, account creation, or trial activation flows. Also use when the user mentions "signup conversions," "registration friction," "signup form optimization," "free trial signup," "reduce signup dropoff," or "account creation flow." For post-signup onboarding, see onboarding-cro. For lead capture forms (not account creation), see form-cro.
seo-audit
When the user wants to audit, review, or diagnose SEO issues on their site. Also use when the user mentions "SEO audit," "technical SEO," "why am I not ranking," "SEO issues," "on-page SEO," "meta tags review," or "SEO health check." For building pages at scale to target keywords, see programmatic-seo. For adding structured data, see schema-markup.
schema-markup
When the user wants to add, fix, or optimize schema markup and structured data on their site. Also use when the user mentions "schema markup," "structured data," "JSON-LD," "rich snippets," "schema.org," "FAQ schema," "product schema," "review schema," or "breadcrumb schema." For broader SEO issues, see seo-audit.
sales-enablement
When the user wants to create sales collateral, pitch decks, one-pagers, objection handling docs, or demo scripts. Also use when the user mentions 'sales deck,' 'pitch deck,' 'one-pager,' 'leave-behind,' 'objection handling,' 'ROI calculator,' 'demo script,' 'talk track,' 'sales playbook,' 'proposal template,' or 'buyer persona card.' For competitor battle cards and comparison pages, see competitor-alternatives. For marketing website copy, see copywriting. For cold outreach emails, see cold-email.
revops
When the user wants help with revenue operations, lead lifecycle management, or marketing-to-sales handoff processes. Also use when the user mentions 'RevOps,' 'revenue operations,' 'lead scoring,' 'lead routing,' 'MQL,' 'SQL,' 'pipeline stages,' 'deal desk,' 'CRM automation,' 'marketing-to-sales handoff,' or 'data hygiene.' For cold outreach emails, see cold-email. For email drip campaigns, see email-sequence. For pricing decisions, see pricing-strategy.
referral-program
When the user wants to create, optimize, or analyze a referral program, affiliate program, or word-of-mouth strategy. Also use when the user mentions 'referral,' 'affiliate,' 'ambassador,' 'word of mouth,' 'viral loop,' 'refer a friend,' or 'partner program.' This skill covers program design, incentive structure, and growth optimization.
programmatic-seo
When the user wants to create SEO-driven pages at scale using templates and data. Also use when the user mentions "programmatic SEO," "template pages," "pages at scale," "directory pages," "location pages," "[keyword] + [city] pages," "comparison pages," "integration pages," or "building many pages for SEO." For auditing existing SEO issues, see seo-audit.
product-marketing-context
When the user wants to create or update their product marketing context document. Also use when the user mentions 'product context,' 'marketing context,' 'set up context,' 'positioning,' or wants to avoid repeating foundational information across marketing tasks. Creates `.agents/product-marketing-context.md` that other marketing skills reference.
pricing-strategy
When the user wants help with pricing decisions, packaging, or monetization strategy. Also use when the user mentions 'pricing,' 'pricing tiers,' 'freemium,' 'free trial,' 'packaging,' 'price increase,' 'value metric,' 'Van Westendorp,' 'willingness to pay,' or 'monetization.' This skill covers pricing research, tier structure, and packaging strategy.
paywall-upgrade-cro
When the user wants to create or optimize in-app paywalls, upgrade screens, upsell modals, or feature gates. Also use when the user mentions "paywall," "upgrade screen," "upgrade modal," "upsell," "feature gate," "convert free to paid," "freemium conversion," "trial expiration screen," "limit reached screen," "plan upgrade prompt," or "in-app pricing." Distinct from public pricing pages (see page-cro) — this skill focuses on in-product upgrade moments where the user has already experienced value.