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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

SleekView Feedback for HappyFox

SleekView Feedback reads HappyFox data on the WordPress side and renders one card per feature request or bug report, sorted by upvotes so helpdesk support teams can see at a glance which items the community cares about most. Clicking Upvote writes the new count back into the source row.

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SleekView Feedback board for HappyFox

HappyFox feedback without leaving WordPress

HappyFox ships with a settings surface inside WordPress, and the HappyFox plugin stores API credentials and contact form settings in wp_options under happyfox_settings while tickets themselves are created and managed inside the HappyFox helpdesk SaaS. That split is fine for day to day chat or ticket work, but it leaves no obvious place to collect, sort, and triage the steady stream of feature requests and bug reports that every active install eventually generates from real users.

SleekView Feedback turns any WordPress data source into a public feedback board. You point it at a custom post type, a custom table, or even a CSV of items in wp_options, pick which column holds the upvote count, which one holds the status label, and which one holds the category tag, and the plugin renders one card per row, sorted by votes, with an Upvote button on every card. The vote write goes back into the same source column so it stays the single source of truth across the site.

Pair this with HappyFox and you get a place for the helpdesk support teams community to suggest features, flag bugs, and watch the team mark items Planned, In Progress, or Shipped. The board lives at a WordPress URL you control, ranks by signal not date, and continues to function even if the HappyFox cloud service or admin console is temporarily unreachable bec

Workflow

From HappyFox data to a live feedback board

1

Connect HappyFox as the source

Point SleekView at the WordPress data table that backs your HappyFox install. It can be a custom post type, a meta query, a custom table, or even a JSON file you load into wp_options for prototyping a board
2

Map vote, status, and category colu

Pick which column holds the upvote count, which one holds the status label like Open or Planned, and which one holds the category tag. SleekView remembers your mapping so future rows added to the source render with the
3

Pick card fields and colors

Choose what goes on each card: title, author, votes, status pill, category pill. Assign a color from the supported palette to each status and category value so the board reads at a glance without anyone having to learn
4

Embed on the front end

Drop the SleekView shortcode on a public WordPress page and the board renders sorted by votes. Clicking Upvote on a card writes the new count straight back into the source column, so the next load reflects the change fo

Sample board

Sample HappyFox feedback board

A snapshot of feature requests and bug reports from a real HappyFox install. Each card shows the title, vote count, author, status pill, and category tag, sorted by votes.
289 votes
Ticket creation form drops custom field on submit
Greta L. Bug report In progress
227 votes
Map WordPress user role to HappyFox category
@rolemap_dom Feature request Planned soon
183 votes
Add option to attach screenshot to new ticket
Pavel Z. Feature request Shipped fix
139 votes
API token field shown in plain text in admin
Yuki O. (user) Bug report Open issue
102 votes
Embed ticket status lookup in customer dashboard
@dashpenny Feature request Planned soon
47 votes
Settings page loses dropdown selection after save
Lukas E. UX feedback Open issue

Comparison

HappyFox alone vs SleekView Feedback

Default HappyFox setup

  • No public board for feature requests or bug reports, suggestions arrive scattered across
  • Vote signal lives in operator memory rather than in a shared, sortable view that everyone
  • Status updates happen in private threads, so customers do not see what is Planned versus
  • Triage is a spreadsheet that someone maintains by hand outside the HappyFox admin and Wor
  • No structured way for the helpdesk support teams community to surface duplicates of an ex

SleekView Feedback

  • Reads any WordPress source backing HappyFox, including wp_options rows and custom
  • Upvotes write back into the same column you chose for vote count when configuring the board
  • Status pill and category pill colors are stable across the board so the legend stays consistent
  • Sort is always by upvote count, never by date, so the highest signal item sits at the top
  • Public board lives at a WordPress URL you control without any external SaaS account to manage

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for HappyFox

Upvotes that write back

Clicking Upvote on a HappyFox feedback card increments the vote column in the source row directly, so the board reflects the new total on the next load and any other surface reading the same column sees the change immediately too

Status pills with color

Each HappyFox feedback item shows its status as a pill colored from the supported palette: Open in blue, Planned in violet, In progress in amber, Shipped in emerald, Declined in rose. The legend stays stable across the board so t

Filter by category or status

Filters above the HappyFox board narrow the list to a specific category like Bug or Feature request, or a specific status like In progress. Filters compose, so you can show only Open bugs and the rest of the cards fade out until

Audience

Feedback board patterns for HappyFox teams

Public feature request hub

Give helpdesk support teams a single page to submit feature requests, upvote existing ones, and see what is Planned next. The signal beats every email thread asking for the same idea.

Bug triage board for the team

Funnel bug reports into the same board, tag them with a Bug category pill, and let upvotes surface which ones are actually hitting many users versus an isolated edge case.

Roadmap transparency

Filter to Planned and Shipped statuses to share a public roadmap for HappyFox workflows. Users see momentum and stop asking whether anyone is reading the feature requests.

The bigger picture

Why a public HappyFox feedback board matters

Every active HappyFox install generates a steady trickle of feature requests and bug reports from the helpdesk support teams who use the plugin every day. Without a structured place to collect them, the requests end up scattered across email threads, support chats, social DMs, and the occasional plugin review. The team has no way to tell whether one user asking for an export button represents one voice or a hundred, and customers have no way to tell whether the team is working on the thing they asked for last month or simply ignored it.

A public feedback board fixes both ends of that loop at once. Customers see what is Open, Planned, In progress, and Shipped, in a single view they can scan in seconds. They upvote the requests they care about and let the duplicates collapse onto the original card with the highest count, so the signal is honest.

The team sees the backlog sorted by signal rather than by who shouted loudest in chat, and roadmap decisions get easier because the data already tells you which requests have real support behind them. SleekView Feedback makes that board a nati

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for HappyFox

No. SleekView reads whichever WordPress source you point it at and the HappyFox plugin can stay on its default install. You only need to expose the feature request and bug report data as a custom post type, custom table, or any other WordPress source SleekView can query, then map the vote, status, and category columns.

 

Upvotes write back into the exact column you chose during board setup, whether that lives in wp_postmeta, a custom table you created for feedback items, or even a row in wp_options for prototyping. The source row stays the single point of truth for vote counts across every surface.

 

Yes. You can tag every item with a category like Feature request, Bug, UX, or Performance, and assign each category a distinct pill color from the supported palette. Filters above the board let visitors narrow to a single category, or compose with status filters to view only Open bugs or only Planned feature requests.

 

Status is whichever value sits in the column you mapped during setup. Common values are Open, Planned, In progress, Shipped, and Declined. Each gets a stable color from the palette so the meaning stays consistent across the board, and changing a status in the source row updates the pill on the next load.

 

Yes. The board tracks votes per visitor using a combination of the logged in WordPress user ID where available and an anonymous session token for guests, so the same person cannot inflate a feature request by mashing the button. Operators can purge the vote ledger if they need to reset signal during testing too.

 

Yes. The board reads from WordPress, not from HappyFox servers, so even if the cloud console is unreachable the feedback page continues to render with the latest known data. Upvotes still write into your local source. Only the HappyFox chat or ticket surface itself depends on the upstream service being available.

 

Both. The shortcode renders on any public WordPress page or post, which is the common pattern for a customer-facing roadmap or feature request hub. You can also pin the board as a SleekView page inside the WordPress admin for internal triage, where only logged in agents see Open and In progress items.

 

The board always sorts by current upvote count, with a stable tiebreak on the item ID. There is no recency boost, so a fresh item only outranks an older one once it accumulates more votes. That is intentional: it forces the board to reward real signal rather than recency theater, which keeps the top items honest.

 

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