✨ 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
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount

SleekView Feedback for Crazy Egg Pro

Crazy Egg Pro stores heatmaps, scrollmaps, confetti, and recordings in your WordPress database. SleekView Feedback reads those rows and renders them as a sorted board with vote counts, status pills, and category tags so designers and clients react to maps in one shared view.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView Feedback board for Crazy Egg Pro

From Crazy Egg snapshots to a live board

Crazy Egg Pro saves every snapshot, heatmap, scrollmap, confetti report, and session recording in WordPress, tagged against the page it tracks. That is fine when you open one report, but it gets painful for a designer who needs to know which of the last hundred heatmaps actually informed a redesign and which scrollmaps keep showing the same dead fold week after week.

SleekView Feedback reads any data source you point it at, whether a custom query against wp_posts, the Crazy Egg log table, or a slice of wp_postmeta filtered by snapshot type. It renders one card per snapshot with title, 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 heatmap complaints, snapshot requests, and UX fixes live next to the report they refer to. Designers stop digging through Crazy Egg bookmarks, PMs see which snapshots got acted on, and the UX lead gets a sorted backlog of what to fix or retire first.

Workflow

From Crazy Egg snapshots to a sorted board

1

Pick the Crazy Egg source

Point SleekView at the post type or table Crazy Egg Pro writes to. Snapshots in posts, recordings in a CPT, or scrollmaps all work. Apply a WHERE clause to scope by page or snapshot type so the board only surfaces reports in active review.
2

Map score, status, category

Choose which column counts as upvotes, which one carries the status such as live or fixed, and which one holds the page or campaign tag. SleekView reads those columns on every page load so the board reflects what your designers marked in the last hour.
3

Embed the feedback view

Drop the SleekView block on any page or use the shortcode. Visitors see a paginated, filterable list of snapshots with title, vote count, author, status pill, and category pill. Restrict it to designers or open it to clients with a single toggle.
4

Votes write back to the row

Every upvote increments the score column on the source row. Future Crazy Egg jobs can sort the backlog by score, retire snapshots nobody opens, and prioritise heatmaps earning real attention. The feedback loop becomes a number, not a hunch.

Sample board

Sample Crazy Egg Pro review board

A look at how recent Crazy Egg snapshots land on a SleekView Feedback board, with heatmap complaints, snapshot requests, recording bugs, and designer praise mixed together in one sortable list.
263 votes
Pricing page scrollmap shows 60 percent never reach the toggle
@designluna Heatmap insight Investigating
176 votes
Add a confetti snapshot for the new blog template
Helena Roth Snapshot request Planned
129 votes
Recording playback stutters on Safari 17 builds
Diego Ferreira Bug In progress
98 votes
Homepage heatmap rebuilt and surfaced a hidden CTA win
Marta Olsson Praise Shipped
44 votes
Scrollmap thresholds reset after the last plugin update
@growthkai Bug Open
15 votes
Expose dead click count on the snapshot list
Lukas Wagner Feature request Under review

Comparison

Crazy Egg UI vs SleekView Feedback

Crazy Egg Pro defaults

  • Saved snapshots live in the Crazy Egg app only designers ever open in earnest
  • No way for the team to upvote heatmaps worth acting on next sprint
  • Heatmap complaints live in chat screenshots, not next to the snapshot row
  • Status of each fix is buried in row level meta with no shared queue
  • No public board to show clients which snapshots are queued or retired

SleekView Feedback

  • One card per Crazy Egg snapshot with title, votes, status pill, and page tag
  • Upvote writes back to the source column so snapshots sort by real engagement
  • Filter by snapshot type, page, or status using any column in wp_postmeta
  • Embed on a public page or behind a login with one block or shortcode
  • Designers stop arguing in chat and start voting on heatmaps inside WordPress

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for Crazy Egg Pro

Heatmap review built in

Each Crazy Egg snapshot becomes a votable card on the board. Designers see which heatmaps the team uses, which look stale, and which ones should be retired. The board is a living index of your UX surface without anyone touching a bookmark folder.

Dead fold flags inline

Add a Dead fold category and reviewers flag any scrollmap with a sharp drop. The flag lives next to the source row, so the design team can fix the layout or copy before the next sprint instead of finding out at the monthly UX review.

Upvotes feed the backlog

Because votes write to the source column, you can sort the saved snapshot list by score, prioritise heatmaps that need a fix, and retire ones nobody opens. The feedback loop becomes a number that future Crazy Egg exports can read.

Audience

How teams use the Crazy Egg feedback board

Design team heatmap vote

Internal designers upvote Crazy Egg snapshots worth acting on and flag the ones with broken tracking. The board replaces a messy Figma file and gives the UX lead one screen to triage the library every morning.

Client facing snapshot vote

Agencies share the board with clients so they vote on which Crazy Egg snapshots to commission next. The client sees which heatmaps ship next sprint without ever touching the Crazy Egg admin or saved view list.

UX design review queue

Design teams use the board as a UX review queue. Anything flagged with high votes gets reviewed first, and resolved fixes move to a Shipped status so the audit trail stays visible without raw session replays or logs.

The bigger picture

Why a Crazy Egg board changes the loop

Crazy Egg Pro is great at recording user behavior. It is much worse at telling you which of those heatmaps actually informed a fix, which scrollmaps the team uses, and which recordings are silently broken after the last redesign. Most teams end up with a snapshot library as long as your arm and a chat channel full of opinions, and the two never meet.

Designers miss the heatmaps that work, the dev team keeps shipping fixes that nobody sees, and clients lose trust because nobody can show them what was decided. A feedback board changes that pattern. Snapshots stop being private bookmarks and start being something the team and the client react to in public.

Upvotes give you a cheap, honest signal about which heatmaps deserve more love. Dead fold flags give you a backlog sorted by impact instead of by whoever spotted the bug first. And because every vote writes back to the source row, the next Crazy Egg review already knows what worked.

The result is fewer stale snapshots, fewer overlooked drops, and a much shorter loop between the heatmap you spec today and the fix that ships tomorrow.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Crazy Egg Pro

No. SleekView Feedback reads directly from whatever table or post type the Crazy Egg plugin uses. 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 Crazy Egg writes shows up on the next page load.

 

Yes. SleekView ships with anonymous voting backed by cookies so visitors can upvote snapshots without an account. You can also require login if you want the board restricted to designers 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 one page, a snapshot type, a date range, 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 snapshot, so the design lead can act on the flag without leaving WordPress.

 

They write back to the source column, which means the plugin and your own queries can sort the saved snapshot list and exports by that score. Several teams use the score to gate which heatmaps get retired, 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 page or quarter keeps both the query and the audience focused so the page feels snappy at scale.

 

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