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Creating Landing Pages From Templates

Learn how to create campaign landing pages faster by cloning proven WordPress landing page templates with Duplicizer.

Overview

Learn how to create campaign landing pages faster by cloning proven WordPress landing page templates with Duplicizer.

Cloning recipes are practical workflows for using Duplicizer in real WordPress content operations. They show how to start from a proven source, create a duplicate draft, update the right details, and review the result before publishing.

Choose a Proven Template

Start with a landing page that already has the structure your campaign needs. This may include a hero section, offer copy, form placement, trust signals, FAQs, tracking fields, and a conversion-focused layout.

A good source template reduces setup time because the most important structure already exists. Instead of rebuilding sections from scratch, your team can focus on the new offer, audience, and message.

Tip

Use templates that have already been reviewed by your team. Avoid cloning outdated campaign pages unless the layout is still approved.

Create the Duplicate Draft

Use Duplicizer to create a new draft from the selected landing page. Keep the duplicate unpublished while you update the offer, copy, images, forms, and campaign-specific details.

Working in draft status gives editors and marketers room to review the cloned page before it becomes public or appears in campaign traffic.

Tip

Always rename the draft immediately so the team can tell the new campaign apart from the source page.

Customize Campaign Content

Update every campaign-specific item: headline, offer name, CTA text, form labels, images, social proof, internal links, tracking parameters, and thank-you page links.

The structure may be reusable, but the message should feel specific to the campaign. Duplicizer speeds up setup, but the team still needs to make the duplicate accurate and relevant.

Tip

Treat cloned landing pages as starting points, not final pages. Campaign details still need careful editing.

Recipe Focus

Template First

Start from a proven page layout instead of an empty editor.

Campaign-Specific Edits

Replace cloned copy, images, forms, links, and metadata before launch.

Review Before Traffic

Test the duplicate before sending paid, email, or organic campaign traffic.

Review Before Publishing

Before publishing, preview the page on desktop and mobile, submit a test form, check CTA links, review SEO metadata, and confirm analytics or ad tracking if your workflow uses it.

This final review prevents the most common cloned-page problems, including old offer names, wrong buttons, outdated images, and copied metadata.

Tip

Keep a simple launch checklist for every campaign landing page so speed does not turn into avoidable mistakes.

Quick Checklist

Choose a current source template Use a landing page structure that is still approved and relevant.
Rename the duplicate draft Update the title and working label before editing.
Replace campaign details Change the offer, CTA, form, links, images, tracking, and SEO fields.
Preview and test Review desktop, mobile, forms, buttons, and analytics before publishing.

Workflow Table

Use this table as a quick reference when deciding how to apply this recipe in a real site.

Use Case
Best Starting Point
Review Carefully
Source page selection
Choose a tested landing page
Avoid outdated layouts
Draft creation
Clone the page into a new draft
Rename it immediately
Campaign edits
Replace offer-specific details
Check forms and CTAs
Final QA
Preview, test, and review metadata
Publish only after approval

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