SleekView Feedback for Fluent Forms
Fluent Forms already collects every entry with the fields and metadata your team needs. SleekView Feedback reads those rows directly and renders one card per submission, sorted by vote count, with a working Upvote button that writes back to the original Fluent Forms entry without any export or th...
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Fluent Forms entries as cards, not as CSV exports
Fluent Forms stores every submission in wp_fluentform_submissions with the response payload kept as JSON. That layout is fast to query and easy to extend. The piece that has felt awkward is showing those submissions publicly in a structured way. The default options are exporting CSVs, building custom WP_Query templates, or paying for a hosted feedback board, and none play nicely with a tight Fluent Forms feedback loop.
SleekView Feedback skips that round trip and reads the Fluent Forms entry tables in place. You point a view at any Fluent Forms form, pick the field that holds the title, the field that holds the category, the field that holds the status, and a numeric field that tracks votes. The board renders one card per entry, sorted by vote count, with status and category pills painted from your existing form choices.
Because the source of truth stays in Fluent Forms, every Notification, Confirmation, and downstream integration keeps firing. FluentCRM segments, Slack notifications, Mailchimp tags, and Pabbly Connect triggers all see the same submission row your moderators see, so your existing automation pipeline does not need a single change to support the new public board.
Workflow
From Fluent Forms entry to a public upvote card
Pick the source form
Map the four anchor fields
Switch render to Feedback
Embed on a WordPress page
Sample board
Sample Fluent Forms feedback board layout
Comparison
Hosted board versus native SleekView render
Hosted Canny style board
- Hosted boards charge per admin seat and per integration on most tiers
- Submissions live on a third-party server even though Fluent Forms keeps them local
- Single sign-on with WordPress users only ships on the higher hosted tiers
- Bridging Fluent Forms submissions to a hosted board needs Zapier or a webhook
- Two admin dashboards means moderators duplicate every status decision
SleekView Feedback
- Reads the Fluent Forms entry tables in place with no schema migration needed
- Upvote button updates the source vote field through the official API
- Status and category badges reuse colors from existing Fluent Forms field choices
- Works alongside existing integrations like FluentCRM unchanged
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Embed with a Gutenberg block, a shortcode, or
[sleekview]
Features
What SleekView Feedback gives you for Fluent Forms
Upvotes that update the entry
Each Upvote click increments the numeric field you mapped on the Fluent Forms entry row through the official API. Reports, exports, notifications, and integrations see the new value on the same row with no sync delay.
Filter by field choices
Any select, radio, or checkbox field becomes a public filter on the board. Visitors narrow by category or status using buttons rendered from your existing field choices with the colors you set in the editor.
Spam protection stays put
Anti-spam tools on the Fluent Forms form keep working untouched. SleekView Feedback respects submission status, so anything flagged spam or trashed disappears from the public board automatically with no extra config.
Audience
What Fluent Forms teams ship with the Feedback view
Public product roadmap
A Fluent Forms form becomes a vote-sorted roadmap. Customers submit ideas, the team sets status, and the board ranks the queue by community demand without a separate Canny subscription.
Community ideas board
Communities collect ideas via a Fluent Forms entry, then surface the top voted ones on a public page. One form drives intake and the public ranking, so admins keep a single source of truth.
Topic suggestion board
Online schools collect topic ideas through Fluent Forms. Students upvote each other's pitches, and the team launches new courses based on a clear, transparent demand signal as votes come in.
The bigger picture
Why this matters for Fluent Forms teams
Fluent Forms is usually one of the most relied-on plugins on the sites where it runs. It collects requests, leads, and feedback in one place, and teams rarely want to add another vendor just to make those submissions public. Yet whenever a client or product manager asks for a feedback board with upvotes and badges, the path of least resistance has been a hosted product like Canny or UserVoice.
That adds a second monthly bill, a second login, and a sync layer between WordPress and the board that breaks every time Fluent Forms ships a meaningful update. SleekView Feedback removes all of that overhead. The board reads the existing Fluent Forms entries, the Upvote button writes back to the same entry row, and the moderation queue stays in the standard Fluent Forms entry list your team already uses.
For agencies, the practical impact is faster delivery on a common ask, no extra retainer for board administration, and a clearer story for clients about where their data lives.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Fluent Forms
Yes. SleekView Feedback uses the official API to increment whichever numeric field you mapped as the vote counter. The new count lands on the same Fluent Forms entry row your team triages, so reports, exports, and integrations stay accurate.
 The view stores a per-entry cookie and an optional IP hash, and uses the logged-in user ID when one is available. You can also gate upvotes to logged-in members only, which is the typical pattern for membership sites that want trusted votes.
 Yes. SleekView Feedback only renders the existing entries, so every Fluent Forms notification, confirmation, conditional rule, and integration continues to fire on the underlying submission exactly as before. Your automation pipeline is untouched.
 Yes. SleekView Feedback respects the Fluent Forms submission status, so anything trashed or marked spam is hidden automatically. For an explicit approval gate, add an Approved yes or no field and tell the view to only show approved entries.
 Yes. SleekView Feedback paginates server side and uses indexed queries against the entry tables. You can pick the page size, choose numbered pagination or a load more button, and page loads stay fast even on very large submission sets.
 
Yes. SleekView Feedback reads URL parameters for category and status, so a link like ?category=Bug&status=Open opens the board with those filters applied. The same pattern works for sharing in Slack, email, or social posts.
Yes. Place several SleekView blocks on the same page, each pointed at a different Fluent Forms form, and wrap them in a tab block. Each board is independent, so one Ideas page can host Bugs, Features, and Wishlist tabs without merging the sources.
 Yes. SleekView lets you save multiple views on the same form. Build a private Kanban for internal triage with status columns, and a public Feedback board with upvotes, all pointing at the same entries with different layouts and visibility.
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