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  • Hey, wood, I’m not the developer of this plugin or associated with them, but your issue can be resolved by enabling (or ‘restricting’, as Google calls it) your API key to allow Google Maps. If you go to Google Console > Credentials > API Keys, click the pencil to edit your API, scroll down to ‘API restrictions’, click ‘Restrict’, and make sure Maps Javascript API is checked. (Before all of this, you’ll need to make sure you have Maps Javascript API enabled.)

    zetamatic is free to chime in, but I’m pretty sure this will resolve your issue. I had the same issue upon install, but restricted my API and I was good to go.

    Hope this helps.

    Thread Starter Tony de la Riva

    (@delarivabrands805)

    Thanks Jorge, I really appreciate the followup. I’ll definitely keep that in mind!

    Thread Starter Tony de la Riva

    (@delarivabrands805)

    Ok, so I got it figured out. I have to say, Barnez, that your response was less than helpful.

    Under the ‘Form’ tab, you set the fields you want to appear in the form.

    Under the ‘Mail’ tab, you determine which information from the ‘Form’ tab will actually be sent in the email when the form is submitted.

    How do you do that? By taking the tags that automatically generated by the fields you add in the ‘Form’ tab, and pasting those tags into the message body area in your ‘Mail’ tab.

    Here are snapshots to demonstrate:

    cf71

    And here is step two:

    cf72

    The information entered in the form fields will now appear in your inbox once the form is submitted.

    [mic drop/]

    Thread Starter Tony de la Riva

    (@delarivabrands805)

    Barnez, thank you so much for the quick response.

    I’ve spent some time googling the issue and also reading through your ‘How Tags Work’ guide, but I’m just not sure I’m following. Even your own example above is unclear to me. What’s on the left, and what’s on the right? And what are the arrows? Are these examples of tags ‘checked carefully’ (as you phrase it), or not checked carefully?

    Your product is free and so is your service—all of which I recognize and appreciate. But this, I think, is a valid question: Why create required fields for a form if the information entered in those fields doesn’t get passed along when the form is submitted? That’s really counter-intuitive, especially when the fields are “required.” And why is it so difficult to correlate fields and forms? One would think that a field would be inherent to a form. Isn’t that what a form is, a series of fields? Again, just seems counter-intuitive.

    Well, any further insight would be greatly appreciated. But I don’t expect you to go out of your way. It is, after all, a free service you’re providing, which I recognize. Thanks again and I’m looking forward to your response.

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