Cookie Policy
How we use tracking technologies at Pramkolex
This page explains what happens when you browse pramkolex.com. We believe in being straightforward about the technologies we use and what they actually do.
Cookies are small text files that get stored on your device when you visit websites. They help us remember your preferences and understand how people interact with our content. We don't use them to identify you personally – they're just tools that make the site work better.
Last updated: January 2026
What tracking technologies we use
When you visit our site, we collect some basic information about your browsing session. This includes which pages you look at, how long you stay, and what device you're using. Nothing particularly invasive.
We use standard web analytics to understand if people find our content helpful. If nobody reads a particular page, we probably need to improve it. That's really the main reason we track anything at all.
The technologies include cookies (the most common type), session storage, and local storage. Each serves a slightly different purpose, but they all help the website function properly or give us insights about what works.
Types of cookies we deploy
Not all cookies do the same thing. Here's how we categorise ours:
Essential
These keep the website functional. They handle things like security, basic navigation, and form submissions. You can't really turn these off without breaking the site.
Functional
These remember your choices – like which programme information you were viewing or whether you prefer a particular layout. They make repeat visits smoother.
Analytical
We use these to see which content gets attention and which gets ignored. Anonymous data helps us understand if we're actually meeting people's needs.
Marketing
These track whether you arrived from a specific campaign or referral source. Helps us understand which outreach efforts actually work.
How this affects your experience
The honest answer is that most people won't notice anything at all. Cookies work quietly in the background.
What you might notice is that the site remembers if you've visited before. If you've looked at our UI/UX programme details, the site might highlight related content on your next visit. That's the functional cookies doing their job.
On the analytical side, we monitor things like which pages people leave quickly versus which ones they actually read. This tells us what content is genuinely useful and what needs work. If everyone abandons a page after five seconds, that's a pretty clear signal.
We don't sell your data or share it with random third parties. The information we collect stays with us and gets used solely to improve the educational resources we offer.
Marketing cookies help us understand if someone came to the site after seeing one of our posts or attending an event. That way we know which activities actually bring people in and which are just noise.
Managing your preferences
You're in control of this stuff. Every browser lets you block or delete cookies if you want to.
The process varies slightly depending on your browser:
- Chrome users can manage cookies through Settings → Privacy and security → Cookies
- Firefox has similar options under Settings → Privacy & Security
- Safari controls are in Preferences → Privacy
- Edge users will find them in Settings → Cookies and site permissions
If you block all cookies, some features won't work properly. Forms might not submit correctly, preferences won't save, and you might see the same content repeatedly because the site can't remember what you've already viewed.
Most people leave cookies enabled because the trade-off is worth it. But if privacy is your priority, blocking them is completely your choice.
Data retention and deletion
We don't keep this data forever. Analytics information typically gets aggregated after a few months, meaning individual session details disappear into broader statistics.
Functional cookies usually expire after your session ends or within a few weeks. Marketing cookies might last longer – typically up to a year – so we can track the effectiveness of campaigns over time.
You can clear all cookies from your browser at any time. This wipes the slate clean, though you'll lose any saved preferences.
Third-party services
We use some external tools for analytics and form processing. These services might set their own cookies when you visit our site.
For example, if we embed a video or use a contact form service, those providers might track basic information about the interaction. We choose services that respect privacy, but they operate under their own policies.
We try to minimise third-party dependencies, but some are necessary for the site to function properly. When possible, we opt for privacy-focused alternatives rather than data-hungry platforms.
Changes to this policy
We update this page when our practices change. That might happen if we add new features, switch analytics providers, or adjust how we handle data.
Major changes will get noted at the top of the page with a revision date. We're not going to email everyone about minor wording tweaks, but significant shifts in practice will be clearly marked.
Checking back here occasionally is the best way to stay informed about any updates.
Questions about our data practices?
If something here isn't clear or you have specific concerns about how we handle tracking, just get in touch.
Contact UsThis policy was last reviewed in January 2026. We're based at Southsea, Portsmouth, Southsea PO5 4EY, United Kingdom.