Step 1 - Theme Options
To begin customizing your site go to Appearance -> Customizer and select Theme Options. Here's you'll find custom options to help build your site.

To begin customizing your site go to Appearance -> Customizer and select Theme Options. Here's you'll find custom options to help build your site.

To add a slider go to Theme Options -> Homepage and choose page slider. The slider will use the page title, excerpt and featured image for the slides.

To add featured content go to Theme Options -> Homepage (Featured) and turn the switch on then add the content you want for each section.
Byline: Written by Allison Grant, plain-English workplace systems editor with 14 years of experience reviewing employee portal and benefits documentation. mydollartree and mytree sound close enough that people treat them like the same thing. That is where the confusion starts. One is often a search phrase. The other appears in Dollar Tree associate benefit and
Byline: Written by Daniel Cross, search quality analyst with 16 years of experience reviewing workplace-resource pages and account-access content. A mydollartree search is rarely about curiosity. Most people type it because they need one specific thing and do not know the exact page name: benefits, a login route, an associate resource, a job application, a
Byline: Written by Julia Renner, product documentation writer with 13 years of experience editing employee-resource and benefits-access guides. A mydollartree search often starts before the reader knows the right page name. That is normal. The problem begins when a broad search gets treated like a confirmed login route. This article is informational only. It is
Byline: Written by Morgan Ellis, local service journalist and workplace-resource editor with 12 years of experience covering employee access questions. The support-style question is usually short: “I searched mydollartree, but I do not know which result is right.” Behind that sentence there is often a real task: finding benefits information, checking an application, reaching an
Byline: Written by Rachel Monroe, employee portal research editor with 15 years of experience reviewing workplace access and benefits education content. A person searching mydollartree is often trying to solve a practical problem fast. They may need benefits information, an associate resource, a job application, a payroll route, or help figuring out why a search
Byline: Written by Evan Cole, account-safety documentation specialist with 10 years of experience reviewing employee portal guides and benefits-access content. A mydollartree search can feel harmless until the page asks you to log in, choose a benefits link, open a careers page, or decide whether a Family Dollar result applies to you. That is the
Byline: Written by Hannah Price, compliance-focused workplace content editor with 13 years of experience reviewing employee resource and benefits-access articles. A search for mydollartree does not always mean one thing. Some people want Dollar Tree benefits. Some want a job application. Some are trying to reach mytree. Some clicked a page that looks close but
Byline: Written by Marcus Hale, workplace access troubleshooting editor with 11 years of experience reviewing employee portal and benefits help content. You click a mydollartree result, expecting one clear associate page. Instead, you get a login screen, a benefits page, a careers page, or a Family Dollar page that looks close enough to be tempting.
Byline: Written by Natalie Mercer, employee-resource content reviewer with 14 years of experience in workplace documentation and benefits-access education. The phrase mydollartree is a shortcut people type when they do not know the exact Dollar Tree associate page they need. That shortcut can lead to the right place, but it can also mix benefits pages,
Byline: Written by Claire Benton, workplace portal documentation editor with 12 years of experience reviewing employee resource pages and benefits-access guides. A search for mydollartree often starts with one small annoyance: you need a work-related page, but the results show a mix of Dollar Tree, Family Dollar, benefits, careers, store systems, and unrelated “my tree”