CSOL provides flexible page templates for building pages in Portal 53. Both templates allow you to add and remove any CSOL module, giving you full control over your page layout. Start with (CSOL) Flexible - General for most use cases, or choose (CSOL) Flexible with Side Navigation for content-heavy pages that benefit from persistent in-page navigation.
To find them when creating a new page: in the template chooser, select Other in the left sidebar first, then search for “CSOL” — a quirk of the editor means the templates will not appear if you search before switching tabs.
The quickest way to get started is to clone an existing CSOL Page that’s close to what you need, then swap out the content.
Includes the full global HubSpot navigation and footer. Best for standard website pages that live within the main hubspot.com experience.
A simplified navigation bar replaces the global nav. Ideal for landing pages, campaign pages, and offers where you want to minimize distractions and focus the visitor.
Omits the top navigation entirely, maximizing above-the-fold real estate. Best for gated content, thank-you pages, and highly focused conversion experiences.
The go-to template for building new HubSpot pages. It provides a single flexible area where you can add, reorder, and remove any CSOL Marketing Web Module. Once you’ve selected this template, use the “+ Add module” button in the page editor to start building.
One of its most useful features is the ability to choose your navigation style per page — no need to switch templates if you want a landing page experience on a website page.
Visit the CSOL module library to browse all available modules you can add to pages using this template. Need guidance on how to create or clone a page? See the How to build a page in Portal 53 wiki.
Designed for pages that benefit from persistent in-page navigation. The template adds a sidebar that stays fixed as users scroll, making it easy to jump between sections on longer pages. It also supports a flexible top area and bottom area outside the sidebar layout.
Both templates share the same main content container ID, so you can swap between General and Side Navigation without losing your modules.
Reference pages with multiple distinct sections where users need to jump between topics without scrolling back to the top.
Sequential content where readers benefit from knowing where they are in a process and being able to navigate back to earlier steps.
Pages covering multiple distinct product areas or features where each section is deep enough to warrant its own entry in the sidebar.
Ready to start building?