SleekPixel for podiatry clinics
SleekPixel reads each guide's title, the reviewing podiatrist, the condition tag, and the review date, then renders a branded OG image on save. Plantar fasciitis articles, bunion pages, and appointment promos all share one consistent identity without a designer in the loop.
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Patient education that looks like it came from one clinic
A podiatry clinic publishes dozens of patient-facing pages over a year. Plantar fasciitis explainers, ingrown toenail aftercare, custom orthotic FAQs, new-patient intake guides. When those pages are shared, by patients in group chats, by referring physicians on LinkedIn, by the clinic's own social account, the preview image is usually a stretched logo or, worse, a random crop of the post body.
SleekPixel turns the guide post itself into the source of the share image. The post fields you already fill out (post_title, reviewing_provider, a condition taxonomy, review_date) feed a template you design once. Every new guide inherits the layout, the reviewer line, the condition badge, and the clinic's accent color. The result is a feed of social cards that all clearly belong to the same practice.
The plugin writes the rendered card into og:image and twitter:image on the post head, so Facebook, X, LinkedIn, iMessage, and WhatsApp pick it up automatically. No more uploading a featured image and a separate social image for every condition page.
Workflow
From draft to shareable card in one save
Set up your guide fields
Design the clinic template
Publish or update a guide
og:image, and stores the file in the post's media row for fast subsequent loads.
Share with confidence
Output
Sample condition-guide social card
Rendered from one guide's title, reviewing podiatrist, condition tag, and clinic accent color. Same template, every published guide.
Comparison
Stock theme images vs SleekPixel for podiatry clinics
Default WordPress theme OG
- Most clinic themes ship a generic OG image that never changes per page
- Featured images get uploaded; the social preview gets forgotten
- Stretched logos make every shared link look like spam in feeds
- Updating the clinic brand means re-exporting every featured image manually
- Front desk staff are not designers and should not be doing per-post Canva work
SleekPixel
-
Branded OG card per guide, pulled from
post_titleand provider fields - Condition taxonomy drives an accent badge so toenail and heel posts visually separate
- Reviewer line surfaces the credentialed podiatrist on every share
- Edit the template once and every existing guide regenerates
-
Falls back cleanly when a field like
review_dateis missing
Features
What SleekPixel gives you for podiatry clinic
Provider-aware cards
The reviewing podiatrist's name and credentials render directly into the social card, so shared guides carry the same clinical authority as the page itself without manual layout work.
Condition-driven accents
Map your condition taxonomy to colors and icons. Heel pain pages, ingrown toenail pages, and orthotic pages each get a visually distinct accent while staying within one design system.
Regenerate after a rebrand
When the clinic refreshes its logo or color, bulk regenerate every condition guide's social card from the admin. No re-exporting featured images one post at a time.
Use cases
Where this fits a podiatry clinic's content workflow
Condition explainers
Plantar fasciitis, bunions, ingrown toenails, neuromas. Each long-form guide gets a branded card that surfaces the reviewing podiatrist on every share.
Appointment promos
New-patient specials and seasonal offers render with the offer headline, expiry date, and clinic contact info pulled from custom fields.
Multi-provider practices
Group practices with several DPMs get the right name and headshot on each guide automatically, based on the post's reviewing-provider field.
The bigger picture
Why patient education needs a consistent visual identity
Most patients arrive at a podiatry clinic through search. They are reading an explainer about plantar fasciitis or a bunion when they decide which practice to trust. The article does the medical work; the social card does the trust work.
A shared link that previews as a stretched logo or a random body image signals an unmaintained site, while a branded card with the reviewing podiatrist's name reads as a real practice with a real provider behind the writing. Multiply that across a year of guides and the difference compounds. Patients forward branded links to family members.
Referring physicians screenshot clean previews into Slack. Local moms-group threads include the card image when someone asks for a heel pain recommendation. Every preview that looks intentional reinforces the clinic's identity instead of diluting it.
The clinic that ships consistent visuals across every guide becomes the one patients remember when their next foot issue arrives.
Questions
Common questions about SleekPixel for podiatry clinic
Yes. Add a reviewing-provider field (a user reference, an ACF select, or a simple taxonomy) to your guide post type. SleekPixel reads the value on save, looks up the provider's name and credentials, and renders them into the card.
 Yes. Map each condition term to a hex value in the template settings. Heel pain pages can render with a warm accent, orthotic pages with a cool one, ingrown toenail pages with another. The template stays the same.
 
Yes. SleekPixel attaches the rendered card via the og:image filter, which fires before the theme's head output. Astra, GeneratePress, Kadence, Blocksy, and most other lightweight themes work out of the box.
SleekPixel only reads the post fields you map into the template. As long as your guide posts do not contain protected health information in those fields, no PHI is rendered into the social card.
 The card itself is a PNG, but the same data and template can be reused for a print or PDF cover via the print-resolution export. Most clinics use this for handout headers in the waiting room.
 Use a different template assigned to a Promos category or post type. SleekPixel picks the right template based on post type and taxonomy, so a heel pain guide and a new-patient promo get different layouts without manual switching.
 Facebook caches the OG image aggressively. SleekPixel exposes a refresh button in the post sidebar that pings the Facebook debugger, which forces a re-scrape. Same flow works for LinkedIn's post inspector.
 
Yes. The template editor is gated by the edit_pixel_templates capability, which by default is granted to administrators. Clinic managers and front-desk users can publish posts without being able to touch the brand template.
Pricing
More than 1000+
happy customers
Explore our flexible licensing options tailored to your needs. Upgrade your license anytime to access more features, or opt for a lifetime license for ongoing value, including lifetime updates and lifetime support. Our hassle-free upgrade process ensures that our platform can grow with you, starting from whichever plan you choose.
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The Bundle (unlimited sites)
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What’s included
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SleekAI
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SleekByte
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SleekMotion
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SleekPixel
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SleekRank
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SleekView
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