Rating: 5 stars
Does what it says it will do!
]]>Rating: 4 stars
It works but with limitations. My main complaint is that it doesn’t support Mailchimp Tags or Groups for segmentation and only supports Audiences. Since segmentation through audiences is more costly in Mailchimp. If you have an audience per membership level it is a really great fit though.
That said it does a decent job of adding users to the Audiences with a few options like optional opt in, automatic add to audience, double opt-in, and optional removal from audience on membership expiration or level change.
Separately, I had a couple bugs with the addon where we saw a user added again to the audience after a simple login rather than registration or renewal. It only happened a couple of times and was not repeatable enough to figure out.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
So far so good, didn’t find any issues at all. It seems that works perfectly fine.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
This plugins is pretty nice and efficient ! worth it ! With many extensions or tips and tricks in the blog, snippets etc.. easy to set for non-developers. highly recommended
]]>Rating: 3 stars
I wanted to migrate my Patreon following onto my own website for various reasons. So I’m running the free version, and hope to upgrade to the paid version once I build a large enough membership to cover the cost.
The leap from free to paid is pretty huge (the equivalent of multiplying my membership by 3x and my income by 25%), which creates a big barrier to upgrading.
I spend so many hours managing workarounds for the limitations such as clunky front-end pages and a lack of multiple memberships that could be better spent marketing and building up my membership – but other than multiple memberships, the paid version doesn’t address any of the issues I have with the plugin, nor would it save me time.
Despite having many new features on my website that Patreon couldn’t manage, I now realize that if I had stayed with Patreon’s registration and checkout process, my income would have keep growing, but it’s only dropped off since I switched to PMPro.
Pros:
After a year, this is working well enough, and I’ve only gotten into a few hiccups which were reasonably easy to help my members through.
It’s free, which is great when you’re just starting out.
Integrates with mailchimp (although not entirely – new members get added to MC, but cancelled members don’t get removed).
Cons:
After getting two fraudulent registrations and a charge-back, I’ve tried many times to set up google authentication and it doesn’t seem to work. Ended up having to make my checkout process overly-complicated (asking custom questions, requiring users enter full addresses and other unnecessary info) at checkout to avoid bots and scammers. This creates friction at checkout, and has cost me new memberships.
I have two sites I plan to merge together one day. Only after setting up PMPro on both of my sites and running it for 6 months did I realize the ‘multiple-memberships add-on’ only works with the paid version. That’s fine, but the documentation was unclear a year ago (it’s since been updated).
The lack of multiple membership levels means I have to spend a few hours every couple months reconfiguring things from the back end to allow some of my members to upgrade their membership. I wish I could use this time recruiting for new members instead, which would get me faster to being able to afford the paid version.
Editing the front-end checkout pages is impossible. Maybe it’s my theme (Soledad, using Elementor) but there are some pages (such as the ‘this content is locked’ page) that I simply can’t figure out how to edit. This makes my membership pages look like trash, reflecting poorly on my content – and doesn’t inspire confidence in potential new members. I’m fairly certain this is a large reason why I can’t convert unpaid members into paid members from these pages.
Does not integrate with substack.
Good to know:
Intimidatingly complicated back-end, and I needed someone who already uses it to walk me through the setup. (I have 25 years experience in web design, a bachelors in graphic design, and a couple years of software engineering undergrad, so I’m not completely new to this). If I hadn’t been short on time, I would have probably chosen a different plugin, but this was recommended to me by a friend and I had to settle.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
No issues, running in a background without any further care – that’s what we need ??
]]>Rating: 5 stars
While the plugin can be used standalone, it stands out best when used with the PMPRO plugin. As a companion plugin for syncing members and member information to MailChimp it works well and is flexible. The multiple triggers and ability to define custom user meta to pass to Mail Chimp merge tags is great.
I would love to see it better support tagging and tagging based on events and changes in the membership system.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
The latest version is much improved. It now works pretty well.
]]>Rating: 1 star
Causes same error now that mike1mus above mentioned. It used to work, is there a problem with the new WordPress version?
]]>Rating: 1 star
Trying to install this plugin and it only generates a fatal error. Will definitely look for a different plugin that actually installs correctly on a current version of WordPress.
Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to a member function get_error_message() on array in /home1/southfn2/public_html/hombredr/wp-content/plugins/pmpro-mailchimp/includes/class.mailchimp.api.php:122 Stack trace: #0 /home1/southfn2/public_html/hombredr/wp-content/plugins/pmpro-mailchimp/pmpro-mailchimp.php(187): PMProMailChimp->connect() #1 /home1/southfn2/public_html/hombredr/wp-content/plugins/pmpro-mailchimp/pmpro-mailchimp.php(777): pmpromc_getAPI() #2 /home1/southfn2/public_html/hombredr/wp-includes/class-wp-hook.php(298): pmpromc_options_page(”) #3 /home1/southfn2/public_html/hombredr/wp-includes/class-wp-hook.php(323): WP_Hook->apply_filters(”, Array) #4 /home1/southfn2/public_html/hombredr/wp-includes/plugin.php(453): WP_Hook->do_action(Array) #5 /home1/southfn2/public_html/hombredr/wp-admin/admin.php(222): do_action(‘settings_page_p…’) #6 /home1/southfn2/public_html/hombredr/wp-admin/options-general.php(10): require_once(‘/home1/southfn2…’) #7 {main} thrown in /home1/southfn2/public_html/hombredr/wp-content/plugins/pmpro-mailchimp/includes/class.mailchimp.api.php on line 122
]]>Rating: 5 stars
I’ve had no issues with this add-on for PMPro, works as expected and really easy to setup! Great job!
]]>Rating: 4 stars
Works but on membership cancellation, the plugin only removes Members from it’s membership level’s List but not from the All User’s List.
]]>Rating: 1 star
Sorry, but what is this? How can I add users to specific group in my list?
]]>Rating: 1 star
I installed this in 2015 and it worked perfectly.
There has been an update … and now it does not work ??
boooo
]]>Rating: 1 star
When I have a new subscriber, it doesn’t add to the MailChimp lists even though I have installed the integration add-on and configured it with everything like the MailChimp API Key.
This add-on needs an update, quickly!
Rating: 5 stars
This plugin works very well. Simple, straightforward, does what it says.
A word of advice to anyone using an IIS server or who is hosted on Azure, this will not work without modifying php.ini. This is NOT the plugin’s fault though, it is a MS issue.
The plugin throws an SSL error. To resolve the issue, you have to download the newest cacert.pem
file (just google it) and add it to your site, somewhere.
Then, follow Microsoft’s instructions here to generate your own PHP runtime. (it is easier than you might think, just follow the directions, carefully)
Then add this curl.cainfo = "D:\home\site\wwwroot\lib\cacert.pem"
to your php.ini file. Make sure it points to wherever you put your file.
Be sure to activate mysqli.dll by uncommenting the line in the php.ini and make sure you have specified your php extensions directory in the php.ini.
Do all that and it should work.
]]>Rating: 5 stars
I’m the developer, so take this with a grain of salt. But this plugin works great with or without Paid Memberships Pro. You simply enter your MailChimp API information, save, and then assign any of your MailChimp lists to be subscribed by your users. If you have PMPro installed, you can set different lists per membership level.
When users register for your site (or change levels), the plugin will move them into the appropriate MailChimp lists.
You can enable or disable the double opt-in. If enabled, users will receive an email to confirm their subscription to the list. If not, they are just added to the list. Be careful if you don’t use double opt-in, as too many “spam” ticks on your emails could result in penalties against your MailChimp account. However, if you have a very clear membership site and users expect your emails, you don’t need to bug them with yet another confirmation email.
Enjoy!
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