SleekView Feedback for Eventbrite Integration
SleekView Feedback reads Eventbrite Integration synced events and the comments attendees leave on their WordPress pages straight from the database, then renders them as upvotable cards with status pills like New, Planned, In progress, and Shipped so future attendees see which events keep selling out.
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Why Eventbrite synced events need a public board
Eventbrite Integration syncs Eventbrite events into WordPress as posts under a custom post type with the Eventbrite event ID and venue meta saved as wp_postmeta rows. Attendees who land on the WordPress event page leave comments in the standard wp_comments table joined to the synced post. The default sync surface gives you embeded tickets but no native way to publish, sort, or upvote the post event chatter your audience already writes inside your own theme.
SleekView Feedback reads the same comments and synced event rows, groups them by Eventbrite organiser, venue, or category, and renders one card per item sorted by votes. Each card shows the comment title, the running vote count, the attendee first name, a category pill like Venue or Topic, and a status pill that tracks whether your organiser team has acted on the note yet. Filter chips let visitors narrow to a single event, organiser, or status so the loudest signal stays one scroll from the page hero.
When a future attendee clicks Upvote on a comment that matches what they want next time, the count writes back into the synced post comment meta, so the sorting reflects real demand instead of recency. Organisers see at a glance which Eventbrite events get the most love, which venue complaints keep coming back, and which new format attendees keep asking for, all from one board reading straight from the Eventbrite Integration sync.
Workflow
From Eventbrite Integration sync to a board
Connect SleekView to the integration
Pick the vote column and the status
Set what shows on each card
Open upvotes to attendees
Sample board
Sample Eventbrite Integration attendee board
Comparison
Eventbrite Integration sync vs SleekView Feedback
Eventbrite sync notes
- Comments on synced Eventbrite pages sit in flat date order with no upvote or status pill
- No category chip beyond the synced post, so venue and topic feedback all blur together
- Status workflow lives only in your inbox, future attendees never see how a request ended
- No way to roll up votes across past synced events to see the topics your audience asks for
- Organisers stitch together Eventbrite exports and inbox notes just to find the loudest signal
SleekView Feedback
- Reads synced events and attendee comments directly from Eventbrite Integration with no extra sync
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Upvotes write back to
wp_commentmetaso the source of truth stays inside WordPress - Status pills cover New, Replied, In progress, Planned, Shipped, and Declined out of the box
- Filter by organizer, venue, or category with chips drawn from your synced Eventbrite meta keys
- Top-voted requests float to the top so the loudest signal sits one scroll from the page hero
Features
What SleekView Feedback gives you for Eventbrite Integration
Upvotes wired into synced comments
Each Upvote click increments a meta key on the underlying comment row of the synced Eventbrite post, so SleekView, the WordPress mirror, and any reporting dashboards stay aligned without nightly extra syncs. Rate limiting protects the count from drive-by abuse on popular event pages near a launch.
Filter by organizer and category
Category chips pull straight from the Eventbrite Integration organizer and category meta, so attendees can drill into a single organiser, city, or category in one click. Operators use the same chips to triage requests by venue, then sort by votes or recency depending on the planning.
Status pills your team trusts
New, Replied, In progress, Planned, Shipped, and Declined render as colored pills on every card. The same status meta drives a kanban view if you also enable SleekView Kanban, so a single status column powers both the public board and the private organiser workflow without duplication.
Audience
Where an Eventbrite Integration board pays off
Hybrid event hosts
Pool session ratings and topic requests across every synced Eventbrite event, then let attendees upvote what they want next time. Hosts ship a category mix that paying attendees voted into existence with their own clicks instead of guessing the next focus.
Marketing and demand generation teams
Group feedback by campaign or launch event, then surface upvoted requests for follow up sessions. The board doubles as a public roadmap that paying registrants helped shape, which lifts repeat ticket sales for every following campaign.
Multi city tour organisers
Show which cities keep selling out and which ones need a fresh format. Status pills let tour managers flag when feedback led to a real change, so future buyers see follow through instead of a silent comment thread on every city stop.
The bigger picture
Why a public board beats hidden synced comments
Most organisers running Eventbrite Integration already collect great post event feedback, it just never makes it past the inbox or the synced event page on WordPress. A future attendee deciding whether to grab a ticket has no way to see which complaint your team actually fixed last season, or which new city finally shipped after a hundred upvotes. That gap costs trust on every comparison search, because the social proof exists but stays invisible.
SleekView Feedback gives the same data a public surface that feels like a modern roadmap tool. Comments show up as cards with vote counts, statuses, and category pills, so a single board answers questions like which organiser keeps delivering, which venue complaint keeps coming back, and which new format attendees are begging for. The data never moves, the source of truth stays inside the Eventbrite Integration sync, and yet the page reads like a Canny board purpose built for ticketed events.
Over a few seasons, that board becomes a living portfolio of how your tour listens to its audience, and that portfolio converts skeptical visitors into ticket buyers far better than a star average ever could.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Eventbrite Integration
Yes. SleekView reads the same synced posts and comment rows that the free Eventbrite Integration writes, so the board works without paid extensions. If you run the paid add-ons that store extra organizer or venue meta, SleekView picks up those keys automatically and exposes them on each card without configuration.
 
The count writes back to a meta key on the underlying comment row in wp_commentmeta on the synced Eventbrite post. SleekView debounces clicks per session and per IP, so a single attendee cannot inflate the total. The count never leaves your WordPress install or syncs out to Eventbrite servers.
Yes if you turn submissions on. New requests land as comments on the closest upcoming synced event with the chosen topic category preselected. The default board is read and upvote only, which keeps the surface area small and abuse low for tours that draw heavy public traffic right before tickets release.
 Status comes from any column you point at, so a workflow meta key like request_status drives the pills. Your team updates the status from the comment edit screen or a custom admin column, and SleekView reflects the change on the public board within the next cache window without a manual reload.
 No. SleekView pages results server side and caches the rendered card list per filter, so a board with tens of thousands of comments loads as quickly as a board with a hundred. Upvotes use a lightweight admin-ajax endpoint that does not bootstrap full template rendering on each click.
 Yes. SleekView respects standard WordPress comment approval flags, so unapproved comments stay hidden. You can also add a private meta flag and exclude it in the data source filter, which is handy for comments that mention sensitive details or that you redirect to a private organiser thread.
 Canny and FeatureBase are great, but they live outside WordPress and require copying data across systems, paying per seat, and stitching SSO. SleekView Feedback uses the comments you already have on the synced WordPress mirror of Eventbrite, ships as a one time license, and renders inside your existing theme.
 Yes. SleekView reads the post and comment language meta that WPML and Polylang already write on the synced posts, so a board on the English page only surfaces English comments. You can also expose a language category chip if you want a single board that lets attendees filter across languages.
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