Do you want to add tooltips in your WordPress posts and pages?

Tooltips are additional pieces of information that show when your mouse hovers over certain words. It’s a helpful way to clarify your content.

In this article, we’ll show you how to add WordPress tooltips in your posts and pages.

Why Display Tooltips in Your WordPress Posts and Pages?

Tooltips display useful information in small boxes that pop up when you hover over an area on your WordPress site. They’re a great way to add clarity to your content.

You can use tooltips to add definitions of difficult words, highlight important facts, and reveal the sources of your information. Like footnotes, they can improve user experience and help build trust with your visitors.

However, tooltips should never be used for essential information. Your post should contain everything your readers need even if they don’t read the tooltip, just in case they don’t see them. You should also make sure you do not overuse tooltips, or they can become a distraction to your website visitors.

That being said, let’s look at how you can add tooltips to your WordPress posts and pages.

How to Add Tooltips in Your WordPress Posts and Pages

The first thing you need to do is install and activate the WordPress Tooltips plugin. To learn more, see our step by step guide on how to install a WordPress plugin.

Once the plugin is activated, there are several ways to add tooltips to your posts and pages. The first is to automatically add tooltips to certain keywords.

Adding Tooltips to Keywords Automatically

All you have to do is navigate to Tooltips » Add New to create a new tooltip. You need to start by adding a title.

This title is a keyword, and the tooltip will be automatically be displayed everywhere the keyword appears in your posts and pages. This can save you a lot of time, since you don’t need to add the tooltip in multiple locations throughout your website.

If you would like other words to also display the tooltip, then you can enter them in the synonyms section on the right of the screen. If you enter multiple synonyms, then they should be separated by the pipe symbol |.

Now, in the content section, add your tooltip. A tooltip might be only a few words long, or it could be several paragraphs of rich content with images and other media. However, keep in mind that you are writing content for a tooltip, not a full post, so keep it as brief as possible so it’s easily readable on any screen.

Once you’ve finished, you should click the ‘Publish’ button on the right of the screen. Now tooltips will be automatically displayed on your posts and pages wherever the tooltip’s title and synonyms are found.

Adding Tooltips Using Shortcode

Another way to add tooltips is to add a shortcode to the content of your posts and pages. This method is suitable for shorter tooltips, or when you want to display the tooltip just once instead of on every matching keyword on your website.

If you’re new to shortcodes, then you can learn more in our beginner’s guide on how to add a shortcode in WordPress.

To add your tooltip shortcode, first you need to create or edit the post or page where you wish to add the tooltip. Then you should add this shortcode where you wish the tooltip to be displayed:

[tooltips keyword=”YOURKEYWORD” content=”YOURTOOLTIPCONTENT”]

Simply replace YOURKEYWORD with the word or phrase you want to add the tooltip to, and replace YOURTOOLTIPCONTENT with the text you want to add to the tooltip. Be sure to leave the quotes in the shortcode so that it works properly.

You can preview the page to see the tooltip in action.

This is how it appears on our demo site.

Building a Glossary From Your Tooltips

Each tooltip is a description of a keyword, similar to what you would find in a dictionary or glossary. As you go on adding tooltips, it is as if you are building a basic glossary.

This is why the WordPress Tooltips plugin allows you to display a glossary of tooltips on your website. Simply add the [glossary] shortcode to the post or page where you want the glossary to appear.

After you have published the post or page, you can visit your website to see the glossary.

This is how it appears on our demo site. It includes the tooltips we added to the plugin’s tooltips list, but not the tooltips we created using shortcode.

If you want to customize the glossary, then you can do so from the Tooltips » Glossary Settings menu in your WordPress dashboard. Here you will find a number of options you can tweak on how the glossary will be displayed and what will be included.

For example, you can choose whether or not to display images in the glossary, and you can list the ID of any tooltips you don’t want to include.

We hope this tutorial helped you learn how to add tooltips to your WordPress posts and pages. You may also want to see our guide on how to create an email newsletter, or our expert comparison of the best free website hosting.

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The post How to Add Tooltips in Your WordPress Posts and Pages first appeared on WPBeginner.