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  • I just wanted to say thank you to @envisiondesign for posting their solution here. There are too many threads with “Thanks, got it fixed!” but absolutely no follow up or explanation.

    I’m also using Divi and what I did was go in to edit the Checkout page with Visual Builder–I imagine this would also work out the same with the Divi Builder–then simply viewed the page as if Divi was handling it and clicked Save. The layout does change but more importantly the option for Credit & Debit Card payment shows up.

    I don’t know if that will address the fix for everybody but this puts an end to the 3 days of trying to figure out how to fix the issue. Thanks, again.

    Was this issue resolved? I seem to be having the same issue. I’ve confirmed that Advanced Card Payments is active on both Live and Sandbox PayPal accounts. I’ve also checked with the theme developer that it is enabled properly in the WooCommerce backend. I just can’t seem to get the radio button nor the Credit & Debit Cards button to display on the checkout page.

    I’ve toggled the payment method off/on, changed the orientation of the buttons from horizontal to vertical and back, but nothing seems to work. The theme developer has suggested I check out if it works when the theme is switched to the default but it’s imperative that the site remain on this theme for the next few days (big promotion for the site is running).

    Any suggestions are appreciated.

    Thread Starter usernameisvalid

    (@usernameisvalid)

    That’s ok. It’s a pretty specific request and it’s not like your plugin is titled “Advanced”. I’ll get around it.

    Thread Starter usernameisvalid

    (@usernameisvalid)

    Ah! Thank you for your thorough explanation.

    Thread Starter usernameisvalid

    (@usernameisvalid)

    Thank you for your response. See my follow up below for some clarification.

    Yes there is, and I said it before. Let your customer have his own GA account and authorize the plugin with its account. You can use the User Management feature from Google Analytics to share the targeted property with your client or vice-versa (if you still need access to that View for whatever reason).

    By “his own GA account”, do you mean that I create a separate GA account outside of my main GA account? If so, my goal is to manage all properties under one account of mine and just provide property-level access to each client’s email address within groups.

    If, on the other hand, you mean to create a separate top-level account, would it work with how I have mine set up:

    My Main GA Account (my proposed plan going forward)
    – Client Group A
    – *Client 1’s Property*
    – *Client 2’s Property*
    – …
    – *Client 50’s Property*
    – Client Group B
    – *Client 51’s Property*
    – etc.
    My original setup was not to group them, but rather give each client their own top-level account. I want to move away from this setup:

    My Main GA Account (my current setup)
    – Client 1’s Account
    – *Client 1’s Property*
    – Client 2’s Account
    – *Client 2’s Property*
    – etc.

    Hope this is not too confusing. Ultimately, I’d like to keep everything in my main account but maybe my proposed plan won’t work with how Analytics is intended to function for clients.

Viewing 5 replies - 1 through 5 (of 5 total)