But for now, it worked. And she had a backup of woocommerce-checkout-field-editor-pro.3.7.0.zip saved in three different places—just in case the wizard ever came looking for his due.
The first thing she noticed was the interface. It wasn’t a typical WordPress settings page. It was sleek, almost invisible. It added a new menu item under WooCommerce called “Checkout Form Designer.” She clicked it. woocommerce-checkout-field-editor-pro.3.7.0.zip
She spent the next hour exploring the rest of the plugin. It let her reorder fields with drag-and-drop. It added conditional logic—show “Rush Processing” only if the cart total was over $50. It even had a debug mode that simulated failed API responses so she could test edge cases. But for now, it worked
On Black Friday, Haven & Hearth processed 3,400 orders. Not a single gift message failed. The warehouse team sent her a photo of their clean queue. The CEO sent her a $500 gift card. It wasn’t a typical WordPress settings page
The problem was the gift message field.