Optimize for non-Webflow sites

Review optimization change history

Updated

See what was changed — and when — across all optimizations.

The change history lets you view all activity across your optimizations — including launches, pauses, code edits, audience changes, and more. Use it to audit work, uncover recent updates, or troubleshoot performance changes.

When to use the change history

Track your progress — see how many variations were launched, updated, or paused in a quarter. Filter by “Edited (Visual Editor)” to find variations you've iterated on.

Troubleshoot visual issues — if a page layout suddenly breaks, you could filter by recent variation launches, code or CSS updates, and precondition or selector changes. See if any variations launched prematurely.

Troubleshoot performance dips — unexpected drops in performance may be tied to recent changes. For example:

  • Audience changes — changes in eligibility may shift who sees the variation
  • Goal updates — measurement logic might affect reported results
  • New launches — higher-performing variations may absorb traffic from others

How to review the change history

Open your Optimize site in Webflow, then click Change History in the Navigation panel.

Navigation

  • Review the chart and list to see the changes that occurred in the selected date range
  • Use the Date range at the top to choose a preset (e.g., last 90 days) or a custom date range
  • Use the Filters panel to narrow results by optimization, variation status, or other changes. If a type of action did not occur in the selected date range, that action won't be listed as a filter.

Chart

  • The number above each bar shows how many changes occurred that day
  • Bar segments are color-coded by action type (e.g., First launched, Paused, Renamed)

Change list

  • Changes are listed chronologically (newest first)
  • Each line shows the date, item (description), action, and user who made the change
  • Click a row to view more details about the change

Action types

Many action types are self-explanatory, like created, paused, renamed, archived, deleted, and so on. These are some other action types you may encounter that might not be as clear:

  • Audience updated — a variation’s audience rules were edited or replaced
  • Code updated / CSS updated — code or styles changed in a variation
  • Edited (Visual Editor) — visual editor updates (text, styles, code)
  • Experience settings updated — updates to traffic allocation or optimization configuration
  • Goal measurement updated — goal value or metric updated
  • Optimization goal updated — the target goal for the optimization was changed
  • Other update — covers changes without a dedicated type (e.g., audience updates)
  • Page definition updated — logic for identifying page types was changed
  • Plugin toggled — plugins such as jQuery were enabled or disabled
  • Preconditions updated — logic determining when a variation runs was changed