SleekView Feedback for Amplitude Experiments
Amplitude Experiments for WordPress stores flags, variants, and exposure data in your database. SleekView Feedback reads those rows and renders them as a sorted board with vote counts, status pills, and category tags so PMs, devs, and clients react to feature flags in one shared view.
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From Amplitude flags to a live review board
Amplitude Experiments for WordPress writes every flag, variant, exposure, and primary metric to your database, with audience, rollout percentage, and decision attached as meta. That is fine when you debug one flag, but it becomes painful for a PM who needs to know which of the last forty flags should actually graduate to production and which audiences keep producing flat lift.
SleekView Feedback reads any data source you point it at, whether a custom query against wp_posts, the Amplitude log table, or a slice of wp_postmeta filtered by flag key. It renders one card per flag with title, primary metric, vote count, author, category pill, and status pill, and every upvote writes straight back to the score column you wire up.
The result is a public board where variant ideas, exposure complaints, and graduation requests live next to the flag they refer to. PMs stop digging through dashboards, engineers see which flags are pulling their weight, and the experimentation lead gets a sorted backlog of which flags to ship, kill, or rerun first.
Workflow
From flags to a sorted experiment board
Pick the Amplitude source
Map score, status, category
Embed the feedback view
Votes write back to the row
Sample board
Sample Amplitude Experiments review board
Comparison
Plugin dashboards vs SleekView Feedback
Amplitude defaults
- Flag results live in a separate dashboard only PMs ever open in earnest
- No way for engineers to upvote variants that should graduate next
- Exposure complaints live in chat screenshots, not next to the flag row
- Status of each rollout is buried in row level meta with no shared queue
- No public board to show clients which flags are queued, shipped, or killed
SleekView Feedback
- One card per flag with title, primary metric, votes, status pill, and team tag
- Upvote writes back to the source column so the backlog sorts by real score
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Filter by flag key, audience, or status using any column in
wp_postmeta - Embed on a public page or behind a login with one block or shortcode
- PMs stop arguing in chat and start voting on flags inside WordPress
Features
What SleekView Feedback gives you for Amplitude Experiments for WordPress
Flag review built in
Each Amplitude flag becomes a votable card on the board. PMs see which flags the team trusts, which produce flat lift, and which ones should be killed. The board acts as a living changelog of your rollout strategy without anyone touching a Notion doc.
Exposure flags inline
Add an Exposure issue category and engineers flag any flag with bad tracking. The flag lives next to the source row, so the platform team fixes the SDK call or audience rule before the next rollout instead of in a postmortem.
Upvotes feed graduation
Because votes write to the source column, you can sort the flag backlog by score, prioritise rollouts ready to graduate, and retire ones nobody likes. The feedback loop becomes a number that future Amplitude reports and exports can read.
Audience
How teams use the Amplitude feedback board
Cross team flag review
PMs, engineers, and designers upvote Amplitude flags worth graduating and flag the ones with broken tracking. The board replaces a noisy Slack and gives the head of product one screen to triage the rollout backlog.
Client facing rollout vote
Agencies share the board with clients so they vote on which flags to ship next. The client sees what is queued for the next release and feels in control without ever touching the Amplitude admin or dashboard.
Rollout review queue
Platform teams use the board as a graduation review queue. Anything flagged with high votes gets reviewed first, and resolved flags move to a Shipped or Killed status so the rollout history stays visible without logs.
The bigger picture
Why an Amplitude flag board changes the loop
Amplitude Experiments for WordPress is great at running flags. It is much worse at telling you which of those rollouts should actually graduate, get killed, or rerun on a different audience. Most teams end up with a dashboard full of exposure counts and a Slack channel full of opinions, and the two never meet.
PMs miss the flags that work, engineers keep shipping rollouts that double count on Safari, and clients lose trust because nobody can show them what was decided. A feedback board changes that pattern. Flags stop being a private dashboard view and start being something the team and the client react to in public.
Upvotes give you a cheap, honest signal about which rollouts deserve more traffic. Exposure flags give you a backlog sorted by impact instead of by whoever shouted loudest in the last sync. And because every vote writes back to the source row, the next Amplitude rollout already knows what worked.
The result is fewer wasted sprints, fewer flat experiments, and a much shorter loop between the flag you spec today and the feature that ships tomorrow.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Amplitude Experiments for WordPress
No. SleekView Feedback reads directly from whatever table or post type Amplitude writes to. You point it at the source, pick the columns for votes, status, category, author, and title, and the board renders. No ETL job, no sync, no duplicated data. Anything Amplitude writes shows up on the next page load.
 Yes. SleekView ships with anonymous voting backed by cookies so visitors can upvote flags without an account. You can also require login if you want the board restricted to PMs or paying members, and the same view handles both modes with a single toggle.
 Each visitor gets a cookie scoped vote token per item. Logged in users are tracked by user ID. A built in rate limit caps how often a single IP can hit the vote endpoint, which keeps boards honest without forcing a signup wall in front of casual reviewers.
 Yes. SleekView accepts a WHERE clause when you wire up the data source, so you can scope the board to onboarding flags, billing flags, a single team, or any combination of meta fields. Different boards on different pages can use different filters.
 The flag is just a category value on the row. You can write it into a meta key the plugin already understands or a dedicated column. Either way it shows up in the WordPress admin alongside the Amplitude flag, so the engineer can act on it without leaving WordPress.
 They write back to the source column, which means the plugin and your own queries can sort the backlog and reports by that score. Several teams use the score to gate which flags get more rollout budget, which makes the board operational rather than a vanity dashboard.
 Both. SleekView ships as a Gutenberg block, an Elementor widget, a Bricks element, and a classic shortcode. Theme developers can call the render function from PHP and pass a configuration array, so you can mount the board on any template without touching the page editor.
 The view paginates server side and only loads rows it needs to render the current page. Indexed columns stay fast even on long tables. For really big projects, scoping the board by team or quarter keeps both the query and the audience focused so the page feels snappy at scale.
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