SleekView Feedback for Avada theme
Avada ships Fusion Builder, Fusion Studio, and dozens of demo sites that customers tweak every day. SleekView Feedback turns Fusion ideas and theme bug reports into a sortable, upvoteable board so the next release lands what your community has been asking for.
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From Fusion Builder support threads to a sorted backlog
Avada has been one of the most installed themes on the planet for more than a decade, and that history is also its triage problem. Customers send feature requests through the Fusion Studio dashboard, post Fusion Builder bug reports in the ThemeForest comments, and email the support desk when a demo import does not look right. Everything ends up in someone's inbox, sorted by who wrote in last instead of by what would help the next ten thousand customers.
SleekView Feedback reads any source you already use to track Avada requests, including a custom feedback post type, a Fluent Forms entries table, or a hand rolled MySQL table. It renders one card per idea, pulling title, vote count, status, and category from columns you already store, with no schema migration. Upvotes write straight back to the same column, so internal reports and admin list views keep ordering by the new score for free.
The board becomes a public Avada roadmap. Customers see which Fusion Builder element requests are planned, which header bugs are fixed, and which demo site ideas are open. Repeat posters stop refiling the same request because they can find the existing card and add their vote, and the team finally has one sorted list to plan releases against.
Workflow
From Avada requests to a sorted board
Pick the Avada feedback source
Map vote, status, category, author
Embed on the roadmap page
Votes write back to the source row
Sample board
Sample Avada feedback board
Comparison
Support inbox vs SleekView Feedback
Support tickets and threads
- Requests scatter across the support desk, ThemeForest comments, and private Fusion Studio chats
- Same Fusion Builder idea gets refiled because users cannot search a sorted backlog
- Status of each request lives in a private tracker that customers never see
- Votes are reactions on a comment thread and disappear when the thread is archived
- Release notes look disconnected from the requests customers actually sent in
SleekView Feedback
- One card per Avada request with title, votes, status pill, and category tag
- Upvote writes back to the source column so admin lists keep sorting by score
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Filter by Fusion area, release version, or status using any column in
wp_posts - Public or login gated using the same block, swap with a single attribute
- Maintainers triage from the admin, customers see the same view on the public site
Features
What SleekView Feedback gives you for Avada theme
Sort by Avada vote count
Each card is sorted by upvote count by default. Filters across category and status let maintainers see only Fusion Builder bugs, only Studio feature requests, or only items marked Planned for the next release, without writing a custom MySQL query in the admin every release cycle.
Fusion area categories
Tag each card with the Avada area it touches, like Builder, Studio, Header, WooCommerce, or Performance. The category pill renders next to the title, and users can filter to one area instantly, which keeps long backlogs scannable for both maintainers and visiting customers.
Trusted moderation
Grant trusted community members capabilities to merge duplicates, retag a card, or change its status. Their actions write back to the same row, so the source of truth stays in WordPress and the team does not depend on a third party tool to keep the backlog tidy.
Audience
How Avada teams use the feedback board
Public Avada roadmap
Replace the static roadmap with a sorted feedback view. Customers see what is planned for the next release, what is in progress, and what shipped last week, with vote counts that show which items the wider audience already pushed for.
Fusion bug triage
Filter the data to a Bug only view for the support team. Maintainers triage by upvote count, mark items Fixed when a release lands, and the score drives which Fusion Builder regressions get a hotfix in the same week.
Demo site request queue
Use a Demo Site category for niche industry requests. Designers see which industries the audience already asked for and build demos that pull in real users, instead of guessing which vertical needs a fresh demo next quarter.
The bigger picture
Why a feedback board changes Avada release planning
Avada has shipped releases for more than a decade, and that history means the support inbox is shaped more by recency than by impact. Without a sorted board, the team naturally fixes the bug that screamed loudest yesterday and misses the Fusion Builder papercut that has been quietly annoying tens of thousands of customers for a year. A public feedback board changes that dynamic.
Customers see their own ideas turn into votes, which makes them more careful when filing the next one and more invested in seeing it land. Maintainers see all the cards in one view and notice that ten small builder issues outweigh one shiny new demo. Agencies who build daily on Avada see what is planned, which makes the conversation with their own clients clearer because the roadmap is no longer a secret kept in a private tracker.
Over a few releases the backlog becomes a living document of what Avada customers want, and the release notes start to look like the cards that got shipped that week. The theme gets better in the places it is actually used most, not in the places that happened to land loudest in the inbox last Friday.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Avada theme
No. SleekView Feedback reads directly from whatever table or post type you already collect Avada feedback in. You point it at the source, pick the columns for votes, status, category, author, and title, and the board renders. No ETL, no sync, no duplicated data, and nothing to reconcile on release day.
 Yes. SleekView ships with anonymous voting backed by cookies, so customers can upvote ideas and bug reports without registering. You can also require login if you want the board limited to paying license holders or beta testers, and the same view handles both modes through a single attribute.
 Each visitor gets a cookie scoped vote token per item, and logged in users are tracked by their WordPress user ID. The plugin exposes a rate limit so a single IP cannot spam the board, which keeps the score honest without forcing a signup wall in front of casual customers.
 Yes. SleekView accepts a WHERE clause when you wire up the data source, so you can scope the board to a category, release version, or any meta key Avada already stores. Different pages can host different boards with different scopes, which is useful when you want to keep the front page focused on the current cycle.
 Status is just a column on the row. Maintainers update it from the standard WordPress admin or from a custom triage screen you already run. SleekView reads the new status on the next page load and re renders the pill, so the team does not need to learn a separate tool to keep the public board accurate.
 Yes. Because votes write back to the source column, any list table, REST endpoint, or saved query that sorts on that column starts ordering by the new score. Several teams use the same column to drive the private internal queue and the public board with one source of truth.
 Yes. SleekView ships as a Gutenberg block, an Elementor widget, a Bricks element, and a classic shortcode that works inside Fusion Builder columns. Developers can call the render function from PHP and pass a configuration array, so you can mount the board on any Avada layout without touching the page editor.
 The view paginates server side and only loads the rows it needs to render the current page. Indexed columns stay fast even on very long tables. For older backlogs, scoping the board by release or status keeps both the query and the audience focused, so the page feels snappy even when the archive is enormous.
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