✨ 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 board for Crisp

Pick any Crisp field for votes, status, and category, and SleekView Feedback renders a public board. Customers upvote tickets, votes write back to the source row, and your roadmap becomes visible without exporting to another roadmap tool.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView Feedback board for Crisp

Crisp tickets become an upvoted roadmap board

The Crisp for WordPress integration syncs conversations, helpdesk tickets, and contact records into crisp_conversation rows with meta for state, segments, and channel that your team already uses for analytics. The structure is rich, but customers never see it. SleekView Feedback reads the same conversations, helpdesk tickets, and segments your team already uses and turns them into a public board where anyone can vote on what gets shipped next.

You stay in WordPress. The Feedback view points at the crisp_conversation query you already trust, picks one numeric meta column for vote count, one status field for the badge, and one category field for the tag pill. Cards render in vote order, badges pull straight from your existing labels, and clicking Upvote writes back to the same wp_postmeta row your reports already chart against.

There is no CSV export to a second roadmap tool, no extra account to invite teammates to, and no webhook keeping two databases aligned. The board, the Crisp dashboard queue, and the public roadmap are one query against your own WordPress database, with votes flowing back into the _crisp_votes meta key your team configures once and reuses everywhere downstream.

Workflow

From Crisp tickets to public votes

1

Connect your Crisp query

Point SleekView at the crisp_conversation post type and apply the same filters you use in the Crisp dashboard for triage. Private rows stay hidden, and the Feedback view inherits the same query.
2

Map vote, status, and category

Pick the numeric meta key for votes, the Crisp status field for the badge, and any category field for the pill. Each role is a dropdown inside the SleekView block, with color mapping built in.
3

Embed the board on any page

Drop the SleekView block on a public page, choose Feedback as the render surface, and pick per-page or load-more pagination. Search, status filters, and category filters render alongside.
4

Upvotes write back to Crisp

Each click increments the _crisp_votes meta on the underlying crisp_conversation row, so your existing reports and exports see the new totals immediately without any separate sync job or duplicate database.

Sample board

Sample Crisp feedback board layout

Each card is one crisp_conversation row ordered by upvote count. Status badges come from the Crisp status field, category tags from your taxonomy, and Upvote writes back to source meta.
311 votes
MagicReply should learn from helpdesk article style guide
@laurenkbase Feature request Planned roadmap
224 votes
Helpdesk search returns expired articles in suggestions
Otis Vargas Bug report In progress
187 votes
Workflow trigger for inactive conversations after 24 hours
Iris Maeda Feature request Open issue
133 votes
Chatbox color theme should follow visitor system preference
@bramblestudio Enhancement Open issue
79 votes
Slack notifications duplicate when conversation is reassigned
Quinn Lewis Bug report Recently shipped
42 votes
Calendly inline booking surface inside the chatbox
Sienna Hall Integration Declined idea

Comparison

Default Crisp versus SleekView Feedback

Default Crisp setup

  • Tickets stay inside the Crisp dashboard with no public roadmap surface for customers
  • There is no native upvote mechanism so feature demand is tracked by hand somewhere
  • Status changes stay invisible to customers until an agent sends a manual reply email
  • Exporting tickets to a separate roadmap tool means duplicate data and stale counts
  • Category taxonomies stay locked in admin instead of filtering a public-facing board

SleekView Feedback

  • Reads crisp_conversation posts and existing Crisp status fields directly
  • Upvotes increment _crisp_votes meta so reports stay in sync everywhere
  • Status badges and category pills color-map from your existing taxonomy values
  • Per-row author, votes, status, and category resolved through the same query
  • Search and filter UI renders next to the cards without any extra configuration

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for Crisp

Conversations become roadmap cards

Visitors click Upvote on the cards that matter, the count writes back to the Crisp meta on the underlying row, and the card moves up in order. No login wall by default, with optional account gating available.

Upvotes feed Crisp analytics

Status pills and category tags double as filters. Customers click a status to see only roadmap items, or a category to find the tickets in their area, with a keyword search built into the same block layout.

Segment and state filters

Because the board reads the live Crisp query, every status update, new ticket, or reassignment shows up instantly. There is no nightly sync, no export pipeline, and no second roadmap database to keep reconciled.

Audience

How Crisp teams put the public feedback board to work

Public product roadmap board

Surface tickets tagged as Feature request with Planned or In progress status. Customers vote on the ones they want first, and the order on the board guides the next sprint planning.

Public known issues list

Show only tickets categorized as Bug with status Open or Reproduced. Customers hitting the same issue can confirm and upvote rather than opening a duplicate ticket through email or chat.

Internal feature triage view

Gate the page behind a logged in role for product managers and engineers. The board becomes a private prioritization tool that uses the same data your support team already maintains daily.

The bigger picture

Why a public board changes Crisp support

Crisp is a strong support tool, but it was built for one to one conversations. Every feature request lives inside a single thread, every bug report is rediscovered by the next customer to hit it, and the priority your team feels never reaches the people asking. Customers fill in a form, get an email, and assume the request vanished into a queue.

A public feedback board changes the contract. Once tickets are visible, customers can confirm bugs instead of opening duplicates, vote on the work that matters, and watch status badges flip from Open to Planned to Shipped without sending follow up emails. Support agents stop answering the same question across ten threads, because the answer lives on a card with a public status.

Product managers stop guessing which feature to build next, because the order on the board is the order customers want. The data was always there inside Crisp. SleekView Feedback just gives it a public face that respects the structure your team already uses every day.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Crisp

No. SleekView Feedback reads the existing crisp_conversation posts, post meta, and taxonomies that Crisp already writes. There is no separate roadmap table, no sync job, and nothing to migrate. Upvotes are stored as numeric meta on the same row your agents see in the admin, so all reports stay aligned.

 

Yes. The Feedback view inherits the same query filters as the SleekView Tables and Charts surfaces. You can restrict by ticket status, category, product, or any custom meta. Most teams expose only Planned, In progress, and Shipped statuses on the public board and keep open or internal tickets behind the admin.

 

SleekView tracks upvotes per browser through a signed cookie and per user ID for logged in users. You can also require a WordPress account before voting if your customer base already has accounts. Vote totals stay consistent across pageloads and devices for known users, with cookie based dedupe for anonymous voters.

 

A separate roadmap tool is a different product with its own database, login, and pricing. You sync tickets across, then maintain two sources of truth. SleekView Feedback reads Crisp data live, so the board, the agent queue, and the reports always show the same numbers. There is nothing to sync because there is only one source.

 

Yes. Any numeric meta key can act as the vote column, any taxonomy or text meta can be the status, and any taxonomy or meta can be the category. The SleekView block exposes a dropdown for each role so you map the columns once through the block UI and never touch the underlying template to change configuration.

 

By default upvotes update the meta silently to avoid notification spam in busy agent inboxes. You can opt in to firing the standard Crisp ticket updated action on each upvote if you want agents to see live demand inside their existing notification flow, or threshold it to alerts every ten or fifty votes for a calmer signal.

 

Yes. SleekView lets you scope the query to one or many terms in any Crisp taxonomy, so you can run a board per product line, per language, or per support tier. Each board is a separate block on a separate page, all reading from the same underlying ticket store with their own filter and field mapping values configured.

 

Because SleekView Feedback reads whatever query you point it at, you can swap the source from crisp_conversation to a different post type or table without rebuilding the board. The cards, badges, votes, and filters stay intact. You only re map the column roles in the block settings, and the public URL stays the same throughout

 

Pricing

More than 1000+
happy customers

Explore our flexible licensing options tailored to your needs. Upgrade your license anytime to access more features, or opt for a lifetime license for ongoing value, including lifetime updates and lifetime support. Our hassle-free upgrade process ensures that our platform can grow with you, starting from whichever plan you choose.

Starter

€79

EUR

per year

  • 3 websites
  • 1 year of updates
  • 1 year of support

Pro

€149

EUR

per year

  • Unlimited websites
  • 1 year of updates
  • 1 year of support

Lifetime ♾️

Most popular

€249

EUR

once

  • Unlimited websites
  • Lifetime updates
  • Lifetime support

...or get the Bundle Deal
and save €250 🎁

The Bundle (unlimited sites)

Pay once, own it forever

Elevate your WordPress site with our exclusive plugin bundle that includes all of our premium plugins in one package. Enjoy lifetime updates and lifetime support. Save significantly compared to buying plugins individually.

What’s included

  • SleekAI

  • SleekByte

  • SleekMotion

  • SleekPixel

  • SleekRank

  • SleekView