Forms: 3rd-Party Integration is a WordPress app, with a 4.9 average rating from 31 reviews, as of Jul 15, 2026.
Forms: 3rd-Party Integration is a WordPress Plugin Directory app by zaus. With a rating of 4.9★ from 31 reviews.
AppRanks data: Forms: 3rd-Party Integration ranks #0 in Cf7 on WordPress Plugin Directory, placing it in the top 1% of that category.
AppRanks verdict
Generated from live marketplace data — refreshed daily
Forms: 3rd-Party Integration is a category-leading WordPress app with a limited review volume. It is listed in the Contact form 7 category on WordPress Plugin Directory, which AppRanks treats as the canonical taxonomy node for ranking and competitor comparison. 31 reviews put it in the early-traction tier — useful for early-stage stores willing to be on the leading edge. Early-traction review counts are sensitive to single launch periods or feature events, so a 30-day re-check before bigger commitments often resolves whether the trend is sustained. Paid-only pricing means evaluating fit on the marketplace listing or via the developer's documentation before installing. AppRanks tracks rating, review count, pricing tier, and category position daily — the figures on this page reflect the most recent scrape from the canonical WordPress Plugin Directory listing.
Pros
- +High average rating (4.9★) signals consistent merchant satisfaction
- +Published by zaus — established developer track record
Cons
- −Limited review base (31) — ratings can shift significantly with new feedback
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How Forms: 3rd-Party Integration works
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Send Contact Form 7, Gravity Forms, or Ninja Forms Submissions to a 3rd-party Service, like a CRM. Multiple configurable services, custom field mapping. Provides hooks and filters for pre/post processing of results. Allows you to send separate emails, or attach additional results to existing emails. Comes with a couple examples of hooks for common CRMs (listrak, mailchimp, salesforce). Check out the FAQ section for add-on plugins that extend this functionality, like sending XML/SOAP posts, setting headers, and dynamic fields.
The plugin essentially makes a remote request (POST) to a service URL, passing along remapped form submission values.
Based on idea by Alex Hager “How to Integrate Salesforce in Contact Form 7“.
Original plugin, Contact Form 7: 3rdparty Integration developed with the assistance of AtlanticBT. Current plugin sponsored by Stephen P. Kane Consulting. Please submit bugs / support requests to GitHub issue tracker in addition to the WordPress Support Forums because the Forums do not send emails.
Hooks Please note that this documentation is in flux, and may not be accurate for latest rewrite 1.4.0
add_action('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_service_a#', $response, $param_ref);
hook for each service, indicated by the # – this is given in the ‘Hooks’ section of each service
provide a function which takes $response, &$results as arguments
allows you to perform further processing on the service response, and directly alter the processing results, provided as array('success'=>false, 'errors'=>false, 'attach'=>'', 'message' => '');
success = true or false – change whether the service request is treated as “correct” or not
errors = an array of error messages to return to the form
attach = text to attach to the end of the email body
message = the message notification shown (from CF7 ajax response) below the form
note that the basic “success condition” may be augmented here by post processing
add_action('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_service', $response, $param_ref, $sid);
same as previous hook, but not tied to a specific service
add_filter('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_service_filter_post_#, ...
hook for each service, indicated by the # – this is given in the ‘Hooks’ section of each service
allows you to programmatically alter the request parameters sent to the service
should return updated $post array
add_filter('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_service_filter_post', 'YOUR_HOOK', 10, 4);
in addition to service-specific with suffix _a#; accepts params $post, $service, $form, $sid
add_filter('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_service_filter_args', 'YOUR_HOOK', 10, 3);
alter the args array sent to wp_remote_post
allows you to add headers or override the existing settings (timeout, body)
if you return an array containing the key response_bypass, it will skip the normal POST and instead use that value as the 3rdparty response; note that it must match the format of a regular wp_remote_post response.
Note: if using response_bypass you should consider including the original arguments in the callback result for debugging purposes.
add_action('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_remote_failure', 'mycf7_fail', 10, 5);
hook to modify the Form (CF7 or GF) object if service failure of any kind occurs — use like:
function mycf7_fail(&$cf7, $debug, $service, $post, $response) {
$cf7->skip_mail = true; // stop email from being sent
// hijack message to notify user
///TODO: how to modify the “mail_sent” variable so the message isn’t green? on_sent_ok hack?
$cf7->messages[‘mail_sent_ok’] = ‘Could not complete mail request:** ‘ . $response[‘safe_message’];
}
needs some way to alter the mail_sent return variable in CF7 to better indicate an error – no way currently to access it directly.
add_action('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_service_settings', 'YOUR_HOOK', 10, 3)
accepts params $eid, $P, $entity corresponding to the index of each service entity and this plugin’s namespace, and the $entity settings array
allows you to add a section to each service admin settings
name form fields with plugin namespace to automatically save: $P[$eid][YOUR_CUSTOM_FIELD] $rarr; Forms3rdPartyIntegration[0][YOUR_CUSTOM_FIELD]
add_action('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_service_metabox', 'YOUR_HOOK', 10, 2)
accepts params $P, $entity corresponding to the index of each service entity and this plugin’s namespace, and the $options settings array (representing the full plugin settings)
allows you to append a metabox (or anything else) to the plugin admin settings page
name form fields with plugin namespace to automatically save: $P[YOUR_CUSTOM_FIELD] $rarr; Forms3rdPartyIntegration[YOUR_CUSTOM_FIELD]
add_filter('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_debug_message', 'YOUR_HOOK', 10, 5);
bypass/alternate debug logging
add_filter('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_plugin_hooks', 'YOUR_HOOK', 10, 1);
Accepts an array of contact form plugin hooks to attach F3p to, and returns that array. Modify result to attach to additional plugin hooks, like GF edit.
add_filter('Forms3rdPartyIntegration_service_filter_url', 'YOUR_HOOK', 10, 2);
hook a function that takes the $service_url, $post_args and returns the endpoint $url
used to modify the submission url based on mappings or other information
$post_args contains the body and other wp_remote_post details
Basic examples provided for service hooks directly on plugin Admin page (collapsed box “Examples of callback hooks”). Code samples for common CRMS included in the /3rd-parties plugin folder.
Stephen P. Kane Consulting From the website and Handpicked Tomatoes:
Transparent and Holistic Approach
Transparency is good. It’s amazing how many web design sites hide who they are. There are lots of reasons, none of which are good for the customer. We don’t do that. I’m Stephen Kane, principal web craftsman at HandpickedTomatoes, and I’m an Orange County based freelancer who occasionally works with other local freelancers and agencies to deliver quality web solutions at very affordable prices.
We work to earn the right to be a trusted partner. One that you can turn to for professional help in strategizing, developing, executing, and maintaining your Internet presence.
We take a holistic view. Even if a project is small, our work should integrate into the big picture. We craft web architecture and designs that become winning websites that are easy to use and to share. We custom build social network footprints on sites like linkedin, facebook, twitter, youtube, flickr, yelp!, and google places and integrate them into your website to leverage social marketing. We help you set up and execute email campaigns, with search engine marketing, with photography, with site copy and content and anything else that you need in order to have a successful Internet presence.
Through this holistic approach, we work with clients to grow their sales, improve their brand recognition, and manage their online reputation.
Category rankings
As of Jul 15, 2026- Cf7#0of 85Top 1%
- Contact form 7#0of 313Top 1%
- Gravity forms#0of 147Top 1%
- Form#31of 551Top 6%
- Contact Form#51of 594Top 9%
See 90-day rank history for each category
Track daily rank changes, category shifts, and position volatility.
Competitors & alternatives
Forms: 3rd-Party Integration doesn't have curated competitor matchups yet. Other tracked contact form 7 apps on WordPress:
Where Forms: 3rd-Party Integration stands in the Contact form 7 category
Forms: 3rd-Party Integration ranks #0 of 313 apps in the Contact form 7 category, placing it in the top 1% of the listing.
Frequently asked questions
What is Forms: 3rd-Party Integration?
Forms: 3rd-Party Integration is an app for WordPress. It currently holds a 4.9-star rating from 31 merchant reviews, and AppRanks has been tracking its public marketplace data on the refresh cadence published in our methodology. It is listed under the Contact form 7 category on AppRanks, where you can see its current category position, review-velocity trend, and how it compares against the top alternatives in the same space. Developed by zaus.
Who uses Forms: 3rd-Party Integration?
Currently around 5,000 active stores have installed Forms: 3rd-Party Integration. Its review base is still building, which usually maps to early-stage merchants and stores piloting a new workflow. It is part of the Contact form 7 category on WordPress.