What are cookies?
A "cookie" is a small piece of information sent by a web server to store on a web browser so it can later be read back from that browser. This is useful for having the browser remember some specific information. Cookies are used by almost all websites for a variety of purposes, including the following:
  • Analysis of visitor behaviour (known as 'analytics')
  • To personalise pages and remember visitor preferences
  • To manage shopping carts in online stores
  • To track people across websites and deliver targeted advertising
Persistent cookies
Google Analytics – these cookies are used to collect information about how visitors use our site. We use the information to compile reports and to help us improve the site. The cookies collect information in an anonymous form including: the number of visitors to the site, the sites from which visitors came to our site, and the pages they visited whilst on our site. We use this anonymous information to understand how the site is being used in order that we might improve the user experience.
Session cookies
A session cookie is added which is used to enable core site functionality. They do not contain any personal information and are automatically deleted when you close your browser. We are committed to ensuring that your information is secure. To prevent unauthorised access or disclosure, we have put in place suitable physical, electronic and managerial procedures to safeguard and secure the information we collect online.
How we use cookies
We only use cookies where we deem them to be necessary for the effective working of the website. They can be disabled in your browser but doing so may reduce, or prevent, functionality on the site.
Disabling/deleting cookies
Most web browsers allow you to manage or delete your cookies by accessing the browser settings. To find out more about cookies, including how to see what cookies have been set in your browser and how to manage and delete them, visit this page
Specific cookies we use

In the interests of transparency and integrity, the information below informs you exactly what tracking cookies are used on our site and why. You will see reference to Hubspot; that's because Hubspot is our chosen marketing software partner. You can read their own Privacy Policy here.

__hstc

The main cookie for tracking visitors. It contains the domain, utk (see below), initial timestamp (first visit), last timestamp (last visit), current timestamp (this visit), and session number (increments for each subsequent session).

(Expires: 2 years)

hubspotutk

This cookie is used for to keep track of a visitor's identity. This cookie is passed to HubSpot on form submission and used when de-duplicating contacts.

(Expires: 10 years)

__hssc

This cookie keeps track of sessions. This is used to determine if we should increment the session number and timestamps in the __hstc cookie. It contains the domain, viewCount (increments each pageView in a session), and session start timestamp.

(Expires: 30 min)

__hssrc Whenever HubSpot changes the session cookie, this cookie is also set. We set it to 1 and use it to determine if the user has restarted their browser. If this cookie does not exist when we manage cookies, we assume it is a new session.

(Expires: None. Session cookie)

__hs_opt_out

This cookie is used by the opt-in privacy policy to remember not to ask the user to accept cookies again. This cookie is set when you give users the choice to opt out of cookies.

(Expires: 2 years)

__hs_do_not_track

This cookie can be set to prevent the tracking code from sending any information to HubSpot. Setting this cookie is different from opting out of cookies, which still allows anonymized information to be sent to HubSpot.

(Expires: 2 years)

__hs_testcookie

This cookie is used to test whether the visitor has support for cookies enabled.

(Expires: Session cookie)

hsPagesViewedThisSession

This cookie is used to keep track of page views in a session.

(Expires: Session cookie)

messagesUtk

This cookie is used to recognize visitors who chat with you via the messages tool. If the visitor leaves your site before they're added as a contact, they will have this cookie associated with their browser. If you have a history of chatting with a visitor and they return to your site later in the same cookied browser, the messages tool will load your conversation history with that visitor.