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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 All-in-One Event Calendar

All-in-One Event Calendar stores events and the comments people leave on them as standard WordPress posts and comment rows. SleekView Feedback reads those records, renders one upvotable card per session note or topic request, and groups them by speaker, track, and status.

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SleekView Feedback board for All-in-One Event Calendar

Read post-event comments as a vote-sorted board

All-in-One Event Calendar registers events as the ai1ec_event post type with start and end times in ai1ec_events and attendee comments living in the standard wp_comments table joined to the event post. After an event closes, the comments left on its page carry session feedback, speaker ratings, and requests for next year's topics, but the default reading surface is a flat comment thread sorted by date with no upvote, no category, and no status.

SleekView Feedback reads the same comments and the same event posts and renders one card per item, sorted by vote count instead of date. A custom field on the comment carries the topic the attendee is asking about, another carries the speaker name when the note is a rating, and the status column tracks whether the organiser team marked the request as planned for next year, scheduled, or declined. The card front shows the title, the running vote count, the author, the category tag, and the status pill, all read straight from the source row.

Clicking Upvote increments a counter back into comment meta so the running total moves with the audience. The board also accepts new submissions from logged-in attendees, which land as comments on the event post with the topic category preselected, so next-year planning starts the moment the event ends rather than weeks later in a separate spreadsheet.

Workflow

From event comments to a public board

1

Connect SleekView to the calendar

Add a SleekView data source for ai1ec_event posts joined to wp_comments with the topic and speaker meta keys. SleekView auto-detects the All-in-One Event Calendar tables and the comment fields the front end already writes.
2

Pick the vote column and the status

Switch the view to Feedback and choose the vote counter on the comment as the sort column. Pick the organiser status field for the badge and the topic taxonomy for the category pill on each card.
3

Set what shows on each card

Put the comment title, the event name, the author handle, and the running count on the card front. Add the speaker name when the comment is a session rating so finance and the programme team can read both views from one board.
4

Open upvotes to attendees

Enable the Upvote button for logged-in roles and SleekView writes increments back to comment meta. New topic requests submitted on the board land as comments on the closest upcoming event with the chosen category preset.

Sample board

Sample All-in-One Event Calendar topic board

Six post-event notes pulled from comments on last week's WordCamp event page, sorted by upvotes so the loudest signal for next year sits at the top.
342 votes
More advanced block theme talks like Saturday's keynote
Sarah K. Topic request Planned next
287 votes
Speaker Mira Patel was outstanding, book her again
@dev_marcus Speaker rating Completed
194 votes
Session room B microphone cut out twice during the panel
Priya A. Bug report Triaging
156 votes
Add a workshop track on WooCommerce checkout blocks
Daniel O. Topic request In progress
98 votes
Lunch break felt rushed, please add 15 minutes
Helena V. Logistics Planned next
47 votes
Move the closing keynote earlier so trains are catchable
Tomasz K. Logistics Declined

Comparison

Default comment thread vs SleekView Feedback

Default All-in-One comments

  • Comments thread sorted by date with no way to surface the most-requested topic at the top
  • No upvote control on comments so the loudest note wins instead of the most-shared one
  • No status pill on a comment so attendees never see which requests are planned or declined
  • Speaker ratings and topic requests share the same flat thread with no category separation
  • No public submission flow with a category preset, attendees write free-form comments

SleekView Feedback

  • Renders one upvotable card per wp_comments row joined to ai1ec_event
  • Sort by vote count from comment meta instead of the default date order on threads
  • Status pill reads the organiser field so attendees see Planned, Shipped, or Declined
  • Category pill reads the topic taxonomy so speaker ratings and topic asks split cleanly
  • Upvotes and new requests write back to wp_comments through standard hooks

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for All-in-One Event Calendar

Upvote on event comments

Each card carries a running count read from comment meta, and clicking Upvote increments the same key. Attendees see their vote land instantly and the board re-sorts so the top request always sits at the top.

Category and status pills

The card pills read the topic taxonomy and the organiser status field, so a Speaker rating that the team marked Shipped looks different from an Open Bug at a glance without opening the comment.

Public topic submissions

Logged-in attendees can submit a new topic from the board itself and SleekView writes the row to wp_comments on the next event post with the category preselected, so planning happens in the open.

Audience

Who runs All-in-One Event Calendar feedback on a board

WordCamp organisers

Open the board after closing keynote and watch the top topic requests rise as attendees rate the day, so next year's call for speakers starts with real signal.

Meetup chapter leads

Run the board between sessions so members upvote which talk they want next month, and the chapter picks the highest-voted topic instead of guessing.

Speaker programme teams

Filter the board to Speaker rating and sort by vote count to see which speakers attendees want back, with the comments visible on each card.

The bigger picture

Event feedback deserves votes, not a comment list

Every event leaves a trail of opinions. People liked the morning keynote, hated the catering, want a track on a topic that was not on the schedule, and one speaker was so good they want them back next year. All-in-One Event Calendar already captures those notes as comments on the event post, so the data is in WordPress the moment the event ends.

The default reading surface is a flat thread sorted by date, which means the most repeated request gets buried under the latest note and the organiser team reads everything in the order it landed rather than in the order it matters. SleekView Feedback turns that same comment list into a board with upvotes, categories, and statuses, so the loudest signal floats to the top and gets a Planned or Declined badge the audience can see. Attendees vote with their fingers, the board re-sorts, and next year's programme is being chosen in public on the same page where the event lived.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for All-in-One Event Calendar

Yes. SleekView reads wp_comments joined to the ai1ec_event post and renders one upvotable card per comment row. The card title is the comment subject or first line, the author is the comment author, and the running vote count lives in comment meta so it does not require a parallel table.

 

The category pill on each card reads a topic taxonomy term saved with the comment. A speaker rating gets the Speaker rating term, a topic ask gets Topic request, and SleekView gives each term its own pill colour so attendees can filter the board to one type without opening any card.

 

Yes. The Submit button on the board opens a short form with a title, a body, and a category preset. SleekView writes the submission back to wp_comments on the closest upcoming event post so the new request appears next to the others and the audience can start upvoting it right away.

 

Yes. The vote counter writes to comment meta and the board re-fetches the row after each increment, so a session that picks up votes during the closing keynote climbs the board in real time. The default SleekView refresh keeps the totals fresh without a page reload.

 

Yes. The status pill on each card is bound to an organiser meta field. The programme team picks Planned, Scheduled, Shipped, or Declined per card from the admin, and the front-end pill updates so attendees know which requests already have a slot and which were considered and dropped.

 

Yes. SleekView reads only approved comments by default, so the moderation queue still works. A pending comment never appears on the board and never picks up votes, which keeps the running totals trustworthy without extra moderation tooling on the board itself.

 

Yes. The default board pulls comments across every event for the season, with a filter for a single event when the organiser needs it. For a multi-day WordCamp you can pin one board per day or one board per track so each team reads only the feedback that belongs to them.

 

Yes. The export button writes the top N cards by vote count to CSV with the title, vote total, category, and status. The programme team feeds that file straight into the call for speakers without retyping anything, so the survey result and the next year's schedule share one row of data.

 

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