✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount

SleekRank for rape crisis center pages

Survivors searching for support need a page with the hotline, languages, and services rendered with care. SleekRank reads the center roster and renders one indexable URL per program.

€50 off for the first 100 lifetime licenses!

SleekRank for rape crisis center pages

Rape crisis center directories need careful, accurate per-center pages

Rape crisis centers do work that survivors may not have language for when they first reach out. The pages that describe these centers carry an unusual responsibility: they need to be findable for a wide range of searches, factually accurate about services offered, and worded with care so survivors do not feel categorized or rushed. Most directory tools were not built with this in mind. A generic locator widget that buries the hotline behind a filter, or a state list that has not been updated in two years, or a page that overpromises services the center no longer offers, can each fail a survivor at a moment when getting it right matters.

SleekRank reads the center roster from a Google Sheet or CSV maintained by the state coalition or NSVRC affiliate and renders one page per center against a base WordPress template. Tag mappings handle the program name and service area. Selector mappings inject the 24-hour hotline and chat URL prominently. List mappings render services (hospital accompaniment, court advocacy, counseling, support groups, prevention education), languages, and populations served. The base template is built with trauma-informed copy and a quick-exit element on every page.

Survivor Center of Atlanta runs 24-hour hotline and hospital accompaniment with Spanish staff. Pacific Coast Sexual Assault Center in Portland offers counseling and court advocacy with Vietnamese and Mandarin interpreters. Same template, different rows, each center findable for the search a survivor types.

Workflow

From center roster to trauma-informed support pages

1

Centralize the roster

One row per center with slug, name, service_area, hotline_24, text_option, chat_url, services array, hospital_accompaniment flag, court_advocacy flag, counseling flag, languages array, populations_served array, status column.
2

Configure the page group

Set urlPattern to /rape-crisis-centers/{slug}/, point at the source sheet, and pick the base WordPress page with hotline-first layout, services grid, hospital-accompaniment indicator, languages list, and quick-exit element.
3

Wire the mappings

Tag mappings for center name and service area, selector mappings for hotline and intake-line numbers, list mappings for services, languages, and populations, meta mapping for description, conditional rendering for hospital accompaniment.
4

Review with survivor-centered editors

Have coalition staff and survivor-advocate editors review the rendered pages for tone and accuracy before publishing. Set short cache duration for urgent updates, flush rewrites, and confirm each URL appears in the sitemap.

Data in, pages out

From center roster to per-program support pages

One row per center with hotline, services array, languages, populations served, and service area.

Data source: Google Sheets / CSV
slug center serviceArea hotline24 services
survivor-center-atlanta Survivor Center of Atlanta Fulton County, GA Yes Hotline, Hospital advocacy
pacific-coast-portland Pacific Coast SA Center Portland, OR Yes Counseling, Court advocacy
lighthouse-louisville Lighthouse Survivor Services Louisville, KY Yes Hotline, Support groups
safe-shores-washington-dc Safe Shores Washington, DC Yes Counseling, Forensic interviews
community-violence-chicago Community Violence Recovery Chicago, IL Yes Hotline, Advocacy
URL pattern: /rape-crisis-centers/{slug}/
Generated pages
  • /rape-crisis-centers/survivor-center-atlanta/
  • /rape-crisis-centers/pacific-coast-portland/
  • /rape-crisis-centers/lighthouse-louisville/
  • /rape-crisis-centers/safe-shores-washington-dc/
  • /rape-crisis-centers/community-violence-chicago/

Comparison

Static lists vs trauma-informed per-center pages

Static list or county page

  • Static lists do not rank for population-specific queries
  • Hotlines buried below long boilerplate paragraphs
  • Hospital accompaniment availability often missing
  • Languages and interpreter access inconsistently listed
  • Prevention education conflated with crisis services
  • Stale entries persist past funding or program changes

SleekRank

  • Hotline rendered first on every page
  • Services per center via list mappings
  • Languages and populations served structured
  • Hospital accompaniment availability surfaced explicitly
  • Quick-exit element on every center page
  • Sitemap includes every active program URL

Features

What SleekRank gives you for rape crisis center pages

Hotline first

Each base template puts the 24-hour hotline at the top of the page with call, text, and chat channels rendered separately. The page leads with the contact method, not a marketing block.

Hospital accompaniment

A specific field for hospital-accompaniment availability renders prominently when the center offers it. Survivors deciding whether to go to a hospital can see in advance whether an advocate can meet them there.

Population-aware services

List mappings render populations served (LGBTQ+ survivors, male survivors, deaf survivors, Indigenous survivors, child survivors, immigrant survivors) with controlled vocabulary so the page matches the specific search.

Use cases

Who builds rape crisis center pages with SleekRank

State coalitions

State sexual assault coalitions that maintain a member-center roster and publish a public directory. Coalition staff keep the master sheet current; the site mirrors it without a content team in the middle.

Tribal coalitions

Tribal coalitions and Indigenous-led networks publishing center directories specific to tribal communities, with cultural-protocol fields and language coverage that mainstream directories do not capture.

Hospital-based programs

Hospital systems with sexual assault response programs that publish locations across their service area, with consistent fields for forensic-exam availability, advocate hours, and intake-line numbers.

The bigger picture

Why rape crisis directories need survivor-centered structure

Sexual assault directories carry editorial responsibility most directory tools never acknowledge. The language matters: "survivor" not "victim" on most pages, with sensitivity to centers that intentionally use different framing. The services matter: hospital accompaniment, forensic-exam advocacy, court advocacy, and counseling are different things, and conflating them on a page can send a survivor to the wrong program.

The accessibility matters: a quick-exit element on every page, a layout that does not require deep scrolling to reach the hotline, schema that helps search engines understand the page is a crisis resource. A data-driven approach makes all of this consistent across the directory: the coalition maintains accurate fields in one sheet, the base template enforces survivor-centered structure, and every program inherits the same care. The pages that result are findable for the searches survivors actually make, accurate to the services each center offers, and worded in a way that respects the moment a survivor chose to reach out.

Questions

Common questions about SleekRank for rape crisis center pages

The base template is editorial work that lives in WordPress, but SleekRank renders it consistently across every center. Coalition editors review the base page for tone, language (survivor-centered, non-pathologizing), and structure (hotline first, no graphic descriptions, no sensationalized imagery). Every program in the directory inherits that base, so the standard set by coalition editors holds across the whole site.

 

Yes. The base WordPress page can include a quick-exit button or floating element that closes the tab or redirects to a neutral page. SleekRank does not impose layout choices, so any safety-aware UI pattern (quick exit, no-history-mode prompt, safety banner) lives in the base template and renders on every center page automatically.

 

Add separate flags or specific service entries (hospital accompaniment, forensic exam advocacy, SANE coordination, court advocacy). List mappings render them. Centers that provide hospital accompaniment 24/7 differ from those that provide it during business hours, so a time-coverage field gives the page the specificity survivors need to plan.

 

Yes. Use a populations_served array (LGBTQ+ survivors, male survivors, deaf survivors, Indigenous survivors, child survivors, immigrant survivors, sex workers, incarcerated survivors). List mappings render the array. Survivors searching for centers that explicitly serve their identity find pages that name the population without ambiguity.

 

Add a languages array for on-staff languages and an interpreter_access flag for centers that use phone interpreters for additional languages. Both render via mappings. Survivors can see whether their language is on-site or available through an interpreter, which matters for the very first call.

 

Set a status column to closed or merged and use a meta mapping for noindex. For merged programs, a referral_to column with selector mapping renders a clear pointer to the surviving program. URLs stay live for direct visitors with a transition notice.

 

Yes. SleekRank registers every generated URL and noindexes the base template page so only program URLs get crawled. New programs added to the roster appear in the sitemap on the next cache refresh, which matters when a new culturally specific program needs visibility.

 

Yes. Place JSON-LD NGO or LocalBusiness on the base page with placeholders and inject row data (name, telephone, areaServed, availableLanguage, serviceType) via mappings. The schema reflects the hotline and service area, helping search engines understand the page is a survivor-support resource for a specific community.

 

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.

Starter

€99

EUR

per year

Get started

further 30% launch-discount applied during checkout for existing customers.

  • 3 websites
  • 1 year of updates
  • 1 year of support

Pro

€179

EUR

per year

Get started

further 30% launch-discount applied during checkout for existing customers.

  • Unlimited websites
  • 1 year of updates
  • 1 year of support

Lifetime ♾️

Launch Offer

€299

€249

EUR

once

Get started

further 30% launch-discount applied during checkout for existing customers.

  • Unlimited websites
  • Lifetime updates
  • Lifetime support

...or get the Bundle Deal
and save €250 🎁

The Bundle (unlimited sites)

Pay once, own it forever

Elevate your WordPress site with our exclusive plugin bundle that includes all of our premium plugins in one package. Enjoy lifetime updates and lifetime support. Save significantly compared to buying plugins individually.

What’s included

  • SleekAI

  • SleekByte

  • SleekMotion

  • SleekPixel

  • SleekRank

  • SleekView