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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

SleekView Feedback for ClickUp for WordPress

SleekView Feedback reads the ClickUp for WordPress synced tasks, custom fields, and statuses, ranks rows by priority field or vote count, and renders a clean public board so ClickUp task-tracking activity reaches a customer-facing WordPress surface without granting outside collaborators ClickUp workspace access.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView Feedback board for ClickUp for WordPress

Why ClickUp for WordPress sites need a public board

ClickUp for WordPress syncs ClickUp tasks into WordPress custom post tables. Each synced task carries ClickUp custom field data in wp_postmeta, including priority, assignee, due date, and any custom fields the workspace uses. ClickUp statuses are mirrored as WordPress taxonomies, and the default presentation is admin-only.

SleekView Feedback reuses those rows. Pick the ClickUp task post type as the data source, choose ClickUp priority or a vote meta as the upvote column, then map status to the ClickUp status taxonomy and category to a ClickUp list or tag taxonomy. The board renders tasks in priority order with native WordPress styling and ClickUp status pills.

Status pill changes can either round-trip to ClickUp through the plugin's API integration or stay local. ClickUp remains the canonical task-tracking tool for the team, and WordPress gains a public-facing roadmap surface that exposes selected tasks without giving outside collaborators full workspace access.

Workflow

From ClickUp to a public board

1

Connect the ClickUp data source

Install SleekView, choose ClickUp for WordPress as the data source, and the plugin scans synced ClickUp task post types, custom field meta, and status taxonomies. A live preview shows real ClickUp tasks so the board configuration can be verified before saving to the site.
2

Pick the upvote column

Map the numeric sort to the ClickUp priority field for a priority-weighted board, to a vote meta for a customer-interest board, or to a derived score that combines priority and stakeholder votes. Each option uses synced ClickUp custom field data directly with no schema changes.
3

Wire status and category pills

Map status to the ClickUp status taxonomy with terms like Open, In progress, Review, and Done, then map category to a ClickUp list or tag taxonomy. Each ClickUp status color becomes a colored pill so the board reads correctly the first time it renders to visitors.
4

Embed the board on a public page

Drop the SleekView Feedback block onto a public Roadmap page. Visitors see ClickUp tasks in native WordPress styling, while the team keeps using ClickUp as the canonical task-tracking tool and the integration keeps both surfaces aligned through normal sync cycles.

Sample board

Sample ClickUp WordPress board

A preview of how ClickUp tasks render once SleekView ranks them by ClickUp priority field or vote count and tags each one with the matching ClickUp status pill.
289 votes
Customer requesting ClickUp-style native automation builder
Product team Feature request Planned
203 votes
ClickUp sync stalls when subtask hierarchy nests deeply
@syncbug Bug In progress
159 votes
Add ClickUp formula custom field support in WordPress sync
Engineering Feature request Open
124 votes
Native ClickUp Gantt view shipped in last release
@ganttteam Integration Shipped
86 votes
Customer requesting ClickUp-style task dependency view in WordPress
Product team Feature request Open
32 votes
Task marked duplicate of an existing parent ClickUp item
@triageops Support Declined

Comparison

ClickUp WordPress admin versus SleekView Feedback

Default ClickUp WordPress admin view

  • ClickUp WordPress admin views are functional but never expose synced tasks as a public board.
  • ClickUp status colors appear in admin filters and rarely become public-facing pills on the website.
  • Stakeholders cannot vote on ClickUp tasks without a separate ClickUp portal extension.
  • Public roadmap views are not part of the integration by default, only admin dashboards.
  • Customer-facing ClickUp embeds typically look like ClickUp rather than the WordPress theme.

SleekView Feedback

  • Reads ClickUp synced data with no schema changes or ClickUp workspace configuration tweaks.
  • Upvote column accepts ClickUp priority, vote meta, or any custom derived score for sorting.
  • Status pills sync to ClickUp status taxonomies so ClickUp remains the canonical task tool.
  • Category pills reuse ClickUp list and tag taxonomies synced into WordPress automatically.
  • Renders in native WordPress markup so the public ClickUp board fits the site theme naturally.

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for ClickUp for WordPress

ClickUp-aware sync

The board reads the synced ClickUp data that the integration populates in WordPress, so ClickUp stays the canonical task-tracking tool while WordPress gains a public surface. Status pill changes can round-trip to ClickUp through the integration's write-back support without any parallel data stores.

Status-color categories

The category pill maps to a ClickUp list or status taxonomy synced into WordPress, so each ClickUp status color becomes a colored pill on the board. ClickUp status edits flow through the next sync cycle and the board updates automatically without manual maintenance on the WordPress side.

Native WordPress styling

Replace any embedded ClickUp view with a native WordPress board styled by the active theme. Visitors get a roadmap surface that visually belongs to the WordPress site rather than the external ClickUp interface, which lifts the perceived quality of the customer experience meaningfully.

Audience

Where ClickUp sites use the board

Public roadmap surface

Embed the board on a Roadmap page sorted by ClickUp priority. Stakeholders see what the team is working on, prospects see real activity, and the team keeps using ClickUp as the canonical task-tracking tool without exposing the full workspace to outside visitors who only need a summary.

Public list transparency

Scope the board to a specific ClickUp list and sort by priority. The result is a public-facing transparency view of that list's tasks, perfect for customer-facing roadmaps or partner-facing progress views without granting ClickUp workspace access to outside collaborators.

Read-only public artifact

Use the board in read-only mode while the team handles work inside ClickUp. The WordPress site becomes a polished public artifact that shows synced ClickUp tasks in native styling, perfect for marketing pages and prospect-facing dashboards that need to feel alive and credible.

The bigger picture

Why a public board beats the ClickUp WordPress admin

ClickUp gives teams an extremely flexible task-tracking workspace with rich custom fields and elegant status color coding, but its WordPress integration is usually deployed for internal data sync without producing a customer-facing artifact. The team works inside ClickUp, the website stays static, and the rich task data that could demonstrate the company's progress never reaches the public surface. Sharing a ClickUp list with outside stakeholders usually means granting guest workspace access, which most teams hesitate to do for privacy and noise reasons.

SleekView Feedback closes that gap by treating synced ClickUp data as a real public board. Stakeholders see selected tasks, prospects see real progress, and the board renders in native WordPress styling so the surface feels like part of the website rather than a ClickUp embed. ClickUp stays canonical, the integration stays the glue, and the public artifact finally exists where outside collaborators can find it.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for ClickUp for WordPress

Yes. SleekView reads the synced ClickUp data that the plugin populates in WordPress, regardless of which ClickUp plan runs on the other side. Free Forever, Unlimited, Business, Business Plus, and Enterprise plans all work as long as the integration syncs the tasks and custom field meta SleekView needs.

 

It depends on the integration mode. Two-way sync configurations forward status changes through the ClickUp API on submission, while read-only configurations keep WordPress changes local. SleekView respects whichever mode the plugin supports and never bypasses the API directly.

 

Yes. The data source picker accepts a multi-list or multi-space filter, so a single SleekView block can render tasks from multiple ClickUp sources with a category pill marking the source list. Each row carries its own priority field, and the upvote column can normalize across sources.

 

Yes, through the integration's existing visibility filter. The plugin controls which ClickUp tasks get synced into WordPress, and SleekView only queries the rows the plugin synced. Private ClickUp tasks that the plugin excludes never appear on the SleekView board for any visitor.

 

Yes. Any ClickUp custom field that the plugin syncs into WordPress meta can be used as the upvote source, the category column, or the status column. New custom fields require updating the plugin's sync configuration first, after which they appear in the SleekView data source picker.

 

Deleted ClickUp tasks get removed by the next sync cycle, and the SleekView board reflects the removal on its next cache refresh. The integration owns the lifecycle of the synced rows, so there is no stale data on the board because SleekView simply renders the current sync state.

 

No. SleekView paginates the underlying query, caches the sorted set, and uses indexed meta and taxonomy joins. A board with tens of thousands of synced ClickUp tasks renders at the same speed as a smaller board because the database does the sort once per cache window.

 

The board keeps rendering against the synced rows already in the WordPress database, but new ClickUp tasks and updates stop arriving until the integration is reactivated. Existing data remains intact, so reactivating later resumes the sync flow without any SleekView reconfiguration.

 

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