WP Engine WordPress integration

SEATEXT no longer offers a WordPress plugin. On WP Engine, add SEATEXT by placing your site-specific JavaScript snippet in the WordPress header so it loads on every page.

1. Copy your SEATEXT snippet

Copy the JavaScript code from your SEATEXT account below. This page will replace the placeholder with your personalized installation code when you are signed in.

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2. Add the snippet to WordPress

Use WP Engine's custom code area if your plan includes one, or use a standard header-injection plugin such as WPCode or Insert Headers and Footers. The goal is the same: place the SEATEXT snippet in the site-wide header so it runs on every page.

Recommended WordPress setup:

1. Open your WordPress admin dashboard.

2. Go to the place where you can add global header scripts or custom code.

3. Paste the SEATEXT snippet into the header section.

4. Save your changes.

3. Clear cache before testing

If you use WP Engine caching, WP Rocket, LiteSpeed Cache, or another optimization layer, clear or exclude SEATEXT from any minification or script combination rules. Then refresh the site so the new script can load cleanly.

4. Activate and verify

Visit or refresh your website several times and stay on the page for about 40 seconds. That gives SEATEXT time to connect your site to your account.

After a few minutes, your website name should appear in your SEATEXT account. If it does not, re-check that the snippet is in the header, not the footer, and that no caching plugin is stripping it out.

Multiple domains

If you want to use SEATEXT on both a staging domain and a production domain, create a separate SEATEXT account for each site. Each account is linked to a single primary URL.

Development URLs such as localhost are restricted for security reasons. Use a real domain whenever possible, and avoid relying on temporary dynamic development URLs if you can.