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✨ 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

SleekView Feedback for AddToAny Pro

AddToAny Pro adds share buttons to posts and pages with per page overrides and a long list of networks. SleekView Feedback turns those settings into a board so marketing, editors, and devs can upvote share rows that convert, flag overloaded ones, and review every page in public.

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SleekView Feedback board for AddToAny Pro (Share Buttons)

From per page share settings to a public review

AddToAny Pro stores global share network choices in options and per page overrides in wp_postmeta under keys like _addtoany. The plugin admin is easy to configure for one page, but the team has no place to see the full set of pages with share buttons, the networks each page surfaces, and the posts where the share row was quietly disabled and never re enabled even after a rewrite that would benefit from it.

SleekView Feedback reads the AddToAny Pro meta and option store directly. Each post becomes one card with the title, the enabled networks, the share row position, and the editor who set it. You map an upvote column for confidence, a status column for labels like Active, Disabled, Under review, or Auto, and a category column for tags like post, page, landing, or archive.

The share config stops being a per page setting buried under the editor and becomes a board the marketing and editorial teams review together each sprint.

Workflow

From share meta to a review board

1

Point at AddToAny Pro meta

Connect SleekView to wp_postmeta filtered by AddToAny Pro keys, plus the global options the plugin uses. Add a WHERE clause to scope by post type or recent change so the board shows the pages the team actually wants to review now.
2

Map vote, status, category

Pick the numeric meta key for upvotes, the status meta key for labels like Active, Disabled, Under review, or Auto, and the meta key that carries the post category. SleekView reads those fields on every page load.
3

Embed the review board

Drop the SleekView block on a marketing dashboard or editorial review page. Reviewers see one card per page with the enabled networks, the row position, the editor, and the current owner. Filters cover post type and status.
4

Votes guide editorial sprints

Every upvote bumps the score on the source meta, so scheduled reports and the next editorial sprint can use the score to surface pages below a confidence threshold for review or share row retuning work.

Sample board

Sample AddToAny Pro review board

A peek at how AddToAny Pro share settings look on a SleekView Feedback board, mixing strong share rows, posts where the share row was quietly disabled, and overloaded landing pages.
248 votes
Pillar guide share row drives weekly shares to LinkedIn, keep current network mix
Halla M. Post Active
192 votes
Pricing page has fourteen networks visible, trim to four for less clutter
@growthlead Landing Investigating
138 votes
Share row disabled on long review post after a rewrite, re enable it now
Tomek R. Post Planned
82 votes
Archive page share row shows Pinterest by default, audience uses LinkedIn
@audops Archive Acknowledged
46 votes
Weekly share row review board for editors finally shipped, thank you team
Anouk B. Praise Shipped
13 votes
Share counter on the launch post throws JS errors on mobile sometimes
@frontend Bug New

Comparison

AddToAny Pro admin vs SleekView Feedback

AddToAny Pro defaults

  • Share settings live per page in postmeta only the editor sees at the time
  • No way for marketing to upvote the share rows that actually drive real traffic
  • Disabled share rows from old drafts stay disabled even after big rewrites
  • No shared queue to show editors which pages need share row review this sprint
  • Network tuning happens in a global setting nobody reviews periodically across pages

SleekView Feedback

  • One card per page with enabled networks, position, owner, and team score
  • Upvote writes back to a numeric meta key so editorial sprints sort by confidence
  • Filter by post type, status, or share network using any meta key on the page
  • Embed on a marketing dashboard or editorial portal with a shortcode or block
  • Bridges the gap between share meta per page and the catalog the team reviews

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for AddToAny Pro (Share Buttons)

Share rows get a review

Every page with AddToAny Pro turns into a votable card. Marketing leads see which share rows the team trusts, which need retuning, and which got disabled by accident. The board behaves like an editorial review queue on top of AddToAny Pro without bolting on a separate tool.

Disabled rows surface fast

Tag a card as Disabled and the next reviewer sees it directly next to the page. Status moves through Investigating and Re enabled, and the decision lives forever attached to the page that needed the share row reconsidered after the rewrite shipped previously.

Sprints follow the votes

Because upvotes write to the source meta, scheduled editorial sprints can use the score to surface pages below a confidence threshold for review. The share strategy evolves on real signal from the team instead of on a single global setting changed once a year on a quiet afternoon.

Audience

How marketing teams use the board

Shared share row review

Marketing leads and editors share one board for every page with share buttons. Anyone can flag a page, the team votes on whether the row helps real readers, and the queue stays sorted by signal instead of by who opened the page editor most recently.

Agency client portal

Agencies share a filtered board per client so editors see pages under review and what got retuned last week. Clients watch the same review queue and stop emailing for status updates between scheduled report cycles.

Share strategy evidence

Each page carries a category, an owner, a status, and a vote history, which is the shape a marketing audit wants when asking which pages were reviewed for share strategy in the last quarter, which makes the next audit faster to defend.

The bigger picture

Why a review board changes share row hygiene

Share buttons are one of those small marketing choices that get configured once and then never reviewed. AddToAny Pro gives you every option, but the choices themselves get made one page at a time and quietly drift away from where the audience actually lives. A pillar guide gets every social network because the editor wanted to be safe.

A landing page keeps Pinterest enabled even though the audience is on LinkedIn. A long review post loses its share row after a rewrite because the editor disabled it during edits and forgot to re enable it. The plugin keeps doing its job, but the share strategy quietly rots over the course of a year.

A review board changes the shape of that work. Each page with share buttons becomes a card the team can vote on, tag, and tune in public. Marketing leads see which networks the team trusts.

Editors see the pages they own. Devs see the bugs flagged on mobile or in JS counters. Status pills give the queue a shape, categories let the team slice the catalog by page type, and votes give an honest signal about which share rows the team still defends.

Because everything writes back to the source meta, scheduled editorial sprints and quarterly audits start from a ranked list that already carries the team's confidence.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for AddToAny Pro (Share Buttons)

It reads what AddToAny Pro saves. The plugin keeps writing share settings into wp_postmeta and global options. SleekView mounts a board on top of that data, so the board renders directly from the live share config with no syncing job and no duplicate share catalog to maintain on the site.

 

Yes. SleekView supports logged in voting scoped per role, so an editor can read the board and vote without ever reaching AddToAny Pro settings. Senior marketing leads keep full admin, junior editors see a curated view, and the same data source backs both surfaces without extra code on top.

 

Logged in voters get one vote per item per user ID, and there is a rate limit per IP. There is also a per role weighting option, so a senior marketing vote can count for more than a junior editor vote on the same card, which keeps the share debate honest without forcing a wall of approvals.

 

Yes. SleekView accepts a WHERE clause when you wire up the data source, so you can scope the board by post type, page template, or status. Different pages can show different boards, which is how most teams build a landing page review next to the full share row review on a separate page.

 

Status is a meta key on the page, so flipping it to Disabled updates that key on the live record. Most teams pair that with a small filter that respects the Disabled status when AddToAny Pro decides to render, so disabling on the board actually hides the share row on the page.

 

Yes. SleekView lets you flip the same data source between anonymous and logged in modes on different pages. A staff intranet can show the full share row history and votes, while a public log can show only the page, status, and category without exposing internal team notes.

 

Yes. Upvotes write back to the source meta key, which means any of your custom reports, scheduled digests, or marketing dashboards can sort pages by score. Several teams use the score to gate which pages land in the weekly review, which makes the board operational rather than a vanity counter.

 

The view paginates server side and only loads rows it needs to render the current page. SleekView uses any indexes on the vote, status, and timestamp meta keys, which means even large editorial catalogs stay responsive on the board without forcing the marketing team to spin up a separate review tool.

 

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