When you finish designing an enhanced landing page, you can publish it to the web.
Before publishing, add settings such as vanity URL, unpublish redirect URL, and search engine
indexing on the landing page record.
Required Editions
Available in: All Account
Engagement Editions
User Permissions Needed
To edit a builder landing page record:
Access Drag-And-Drop Builder
To publish a landing page:
Account Engagement Administrator or Marketing
role
OR
A custom user role that includes View and Create/Edit on Landing Pages
To unpublish a landing page:
Account Engagement Administrator or Marketing
role
OR
A custom user role that includes View and Delete on Landing Pages
When you create or edit an enhanced landing page, the content and settings are saved but
not published. Some of the fields are validated when you click Publish. To finalize your landing
page or make changes available online, you must publish or republish the landing page.
In Account Engagement Lightning App, open a builder landing page record.
Preview the landing page on the Content tab.
In the toolbar, click Publish.
On the Publish window, click Publish.
Review and resolve any validation errors.
After you publish a landing page for the first time, the Public Link field is populated and
the Status is updated to Published. To view your page online, paste the public link into your
browser.
Engagement History metrics for landing pages include builder landing page metrics. You can use
the Source field to filter statistics.
Did this article solve your issue?
Let us know so we can improve!
Loading
Salesforce Help | Article
Cookie Consent Manager
General Information
Required Cookies
Functional Cookies
Advertising Cookies
General Information
We use three kinds of cookies on our websites: required, functional, and advertising. You can choose whether functional and advertising cookies apply. Click on the different cookie categories to find out more about each category and to change the default settings.
Privacy Statement
Required Cookies
Always Active
Required cookies are necessary for basic website functionality. Some examples include: session cookies needed to transmit the website, authentication cookies, and security cookies.
Functional Cookies
Functional cookies enhance functions, performance, and services on the website. Some examples include: cookies used to analyze site traffic, cookies used for market research, and cookies used to display advertising that is not directed to a particular individual.
Advertising Cookies
Advertising cookies track activity across websites in order to understand a viewer’s interests, and direct them specific marketing. Some examples include: cookies used for remarketing, or interest-based advertising.