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 Victor Ames, workplace systems explainer with 13 years of experience editing employee portal, HR, and benefits-access content. A mydollartree search usually means the reader has one practical question but does not know which “desk” owns the answer. Benefits, careers, payroll, HR, login recovery, Family Dollar resources, and public articles can all appear
Byline: Written by Caroline Voss, workplace access editor with 14 years of experience reviewing employee-resource, benefits, and account-safety guides. A mydollartree search usually goes wrong in small ways, not dramatic ones. The reader opens a page that almost fits, sees a familiar brand name, notices a login box, or assumes a benefits summary is personal
Byline: Written by Rebecca Sloan, employee-resource documentation reviewer with 15 years of experience editing workplace access and benefits guidance. A mydollartree search is useful only up to a point. It can help you find words like mytree, associate resources, careers, benefits, Family Dollar, payroll, or login help. After that, the search result should hand you
Byline: Written by Melissa Crane, employee-access guide editor with 12 years of experience reviewing workplace portal, benefits, and payroll-help content. A mydollartree search usually starts with a small gap: you know the company name, but not the exact page, system, or support route. That gap can lead to benefits pages, careers results, Family Dollar resources,
Byline: Written by Grant Foster, payments operations and employee-access reviewer with 13 years of experience editing workplace portal guidance. A mydollartree search usually gives clues before it gives answers. A page title mentions “associate.” Another says “benefits.” Another points to “careers.” A different result says Family Dollar. One page asks for a login. The reader’s
Byline: Written by Nora Bennett, compliance editor for employee-resource content with 16 years of experience reviewing workplace access guides. A mydollartree result can look useful before it proves anything. The title may mention Dollar Tree, mytree, benefits, associate resources, careers, or support. The page may still be only an article, a public summary, a hiring
Byline: Written by Leah Martin, workplace account-safety editor with 11 years of experience reviewing employee resource and benefits-access content. The search term mydollartree usually means the reader is stuck between names: Dollar Tree, mytree, associate resources, benefits, careers, payroll, Family Dollar, and login help. The wrong move is to click the first familiar result and
Byline: Written by Adrian Lowe, search-result quality editor with 17 years of experience reviewing employee-resource and account-access content. A mydollartree search can send you to pages that look related but solve different problems. One result may explain Dollar Tree mytree benefits. Another may show careers information. Another may point to Family Dollar. Another may be
Byline: Written by Serena Whitman, employee support documentation editor with 12 years of experience reviewing workplace portal and benefits-access guidance. A cashier searches mydollartree during a lunch break because a manager mentioned “mytree,” but the results show benefits pages, careers pages, Family Dollar resources, and a few third-party guides. The question is not only “Which
Byline: Written by Patrick Lane, former payroll support lead and employee-access documentation reviewer with 15 years of experience. Two browser tabs can look almost identical. One explains mydollartree as a search topic. The other asks for a login. A reader in a hurry may treat both tabs as equal, especially when the wording includes Dollar