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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

SleekView Feedback for AWeber for WordPress

AWeber for WordPress drops opt in forms across your site and writes every signup, tag, and broadcast event to a local log. SleekView Feedback turns those rows into a sortable board where editors vote on broadcasts, subscribers flag failed signups, and ops sees what to fix.

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SleekView Feedback board for AWeber for WordPress

From AWeber signups to a live review queue

AWeber for WordPress writes every embedded form, signup attempt, tag rule, and broadcast event to a mix of wp_options and the post meta on whatever page hosts the form. The data is rich, but the admin screens are built around setting up the next list, not around editors arguing about which forms are quietly failing on Safari or which broadcasts earned their slot in the calendar this month.

SleekView Feedback reads any AWeber source you point it at and treats each row as a card. Pick a numeric column like signup_count or open_count for upvotes, a status column for the pill, and a category column like list_name for the tag. The board renders in minutes and shows whatever AWeber and your team did last, sorted however you choose to look at it.

The shift is that AWeber stops being a back office service that only the email admin trusts. Editors, subscribers, and clients can land on a board, sort by upvotes, flag failed signups, and request which forms deserve more love. AWeber keeps sending. The board gives the team a queue.

Workflow

From AWeber signups to a board

1

Connect the AWeber source

Point SleekView at the AWeber log table or any saved view of wp_options it uses for signup history. Apply a WHERE clause to scope by list, form, or date so the board only shows the events your editors want to triage.
2

Map votes, status, category

Choose which numeric column counts as upvotes, which column holds the status label like Subscribed, Failed, or Bounced, and which column carries the list tag. SleekView reads these on every page load so the board reflects AWeber state.
3

Embed the feedback view

Drop the SleekView block on any page or use the shortcode to render the board. Visitors see a sorted feed of AWeber events with title, vote count, author, status pill, and category pill. The board paginates and can be public or staff only.
4

Votes write back to AWeber

Every upvote increments the vote column on the source row. AWeber reports can read that score and sort future broadcasts and forms by it, so popular content earns more attention and dead lists quietly retire next month.

Sample board

Sample AWeber feedback board

A peek at how recent AWeber for WordPress events look on a SleekView Feedback board, mixing failed signup reports, new broadcast requests, and praise for forms that quietly grew real lists.
256 votes
Inline form silently fails on Safari private browsing
Helena R. Bug Investigating
191 votes
Add tag mapping for WooCommerce purchase amount tiers
@awbartista Feature request Planned
143 votes
Last weeks digest hit 41 percent opens after subject tweak
Priya N. Praise Shipped
98 votes
Double opt in confirmation link expires in 60 seconds
Tomasz K. Bug In progress
52 votes
Expose AWeber stats inside the WP admin dashboard widget
@listloretta Idea New
11 votes
Webhook signature fails on subscribe events with emoji
Lukas W. Bug Open

Comparison

AWeber admin vs SleekView Feedback

AWeber default screens

  • Signup history sits in a back office screen that only the email admin ever opens
  • No way for editors or subscribers to upvote which broadcasts earned their slot back
  • Failed signup reports live in support tickets, not next to the form configuration
  • Status of each disputed form embed is buried in row level meta with no shared view
  • No public queue to show editors which broadcasts are queued, shipped, or killed off

SleekView Feedback

  • One card per AWeber event with title, votes, status pill, and category tag
  • Upvote writes back to the source column so future audits can sort by real score
  • Filter by list, form, or status using any column in the AWeber integration log
  • Embed on a public page or behind a login with one shortcode or block on any theme
  • Editors stop arguing in Slack and start voting on AWeber broadcasts in WP

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for AWeber for WordPress

Broadcast review built in

Each AWeber broadcast becomes a votable card. Editors see which campaigns the team prefers, which ones broke on the last send, and which ones get retired. The board acts as a living changelog of your AWeber strategy.

Failed signup reports inline

Add a Sync error category to the board and editors can flag any failed AWeber subscription with one click. The flag lives next to the source row, so the admin tuning forms can see the issue without leaving WordPress.

Upvotes feed back into AWeber

Because votes write to the source column, you can sort AWeber queues by score, give popular forms priority, and quietly drop ones nobody uses. The feedback loop becomes a number your marketing lead can sort, filter, and act on.

Audience

How teams use the AWeber feedback board

Subscriber signup review

Site visitors upvote the AWeber forms they happily signed up through and flag the ones that failed. The board replaces a flood of support tickets and gives the editor one screen to triage form friction every morning.

Editorial broadcast vote

Editors use the board to vote on which AWeber broadcasts get top placement next month. Strong upvotes win the schedule, weak ones get archived, and the decision lives in WordPress instead of a Trello board.

Integration health queue

Ops teams use the board as a sorted backlog of failed AWeber signups. High vote count issues get reviewed first, and resolved items move to a Fixed status so the audit trail stays visible for AWeber reports.

The bigger picture

Why an AWeber feedback board changes things

AWeber has been a reliable list engine inside WordPress for years, but reliability is exactly what makes problems easy to miss. The plugin handles the embed, the API call, the tag rule, and the broadcast schedule, and most of the time it works. The problem is that when a form silently fails on Safari or a confirmation link expires too fast, the only place anyone sees it is the back office log.

Editors hear about a missed signup days later through a ticket. Writers never find out whether the broadcast they wrote earned its open rate. A feedback board changes that pattern.

Each AWeber event becomes a card the team and the audience can react to in public. Upvotes give you a cheap, honest signal about which forms and broadcasts work in the real world. Failed signup flags give you a backlog sorted by impact instead of by whoever shouted loudest in the last meeting.

And because everything writes back to the source row, the next time you audit your AWeber setup you already know what worked.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for AWeber for WordPress

No. SleekView Feedback reads directly from whatever table, option key, or meta key the AWeber integration is using. 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 on the site.

 

Yes. SleekView ships with anonymous voting backed by cookies, so public visitors can upvote feedback items without an account. You can also require login if you want the board restricted to editors or paying members, and the same view handles both modes with a single toggle in settings.

 

Each visitor gets a cookie scoped vote token per item. Logged in users are tracked by user ID. The plugin also exposes a rate limit so a single IP cannot spam the board, which is enough to keep a public AWeber feedback queue honest without forcing a signup wall in front of regular site readers.

 

Yes. SleekView accepts a WHERE clause when you wire up the data source, so you can scope the board to one list, one form, one tag, or any combination of fields AWeber already stores. Different boards on different pages can use different filters at the same time for clean reporting splits.

 

Sync error is just a category value on the row. You can write it into a meta key the AWeber integration already understands or a dedicated column. Either way it shows up in the WordPress admin alongside the original form embed, so the marketer can see the flag without leaving WordPress.

 

They write back to the source column in WordPress, which means your local reports and broadcasts can sort future actions by that score. Several teams use the score to gate which forms get more traffic, which makes the board operational and not just a vanity dashboard for the marketing lead.

 

Both. SleekView ships as a Gutenberg block, an Elementor widget, a Bricks element, and a classic shortcode. Theme developers can also 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 at all.

 

The view paginates server side and only loads the rows it needs to render the current page. Indexed columns stay fast even on long tables. For really busy lists, scoping the board by list or recent date range keeps both the query and the audience focused, so the page feels snappy at scale.

 

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