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

SleekView Feedback for Intuitive Custom Post Order

Intuitive Custom Post Order tracks which post types and taxonomies have manual ordering enabled. SleekView Feedback reads those rules, renders one card per configured type with vote, status pill, and tag, so the team can manage manual ordering with evidence.

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SleekView Feedback board for Intuitive Custom Post Order

From ordering rules to a sortable review board

Intuitive Custom Post Order is one of those plugins that quietly does a lot. The plugin stores which post types and taxonomies have manual ordering enabled, and writes a menu_order value (or equivalent) on every row inside an enabled type. The admin settings page lists the enabled types as checkboxes, but offers no opinion about which manual ordering rules are still earning their weight and which are quietly making editors waste time.

SleekView Feedback reads the Intuitive Custom Post Order settings and renders one card per enabled type with title (post type or taxonomy name), the count of rows manually ordered, a status pill, and a category tag for type. Filter the board by category to see only post types or only taxonomies. Editors can upvote the orderings they actively use, flag types where drag and drop broke after a plugin update, and propose disabling rules that no longer matter.

Vote and status changes write back to a slug keyed sidecar, so the plugin's settings remain untouched and the board becomes the governance layer the manual ordering surface has always lacked.

Workflow

From ordering rules to a public board

1

Point at the plugin settings

Aim SleekView at the Intuitive Custom Post Order settings record. The data source expands enabled types into one row per post type or taxonomy, with row counts and the date the rule was enabled, so the board has real context to display.
2

Map vote, status, and type tag

Nominate vote and status fields in the sidecar, and use type (post type vs taxonomy) as the category tag. Cards show how many rows the rule covers, which gives reviewers immediate intuition about how impactful a given rule is on the actual site.
3

Embed the board on a page

Drop the SleekView block on an internal docs or admin page. Editors and stakeholders see a sortable feed of enabled types with name, row count, vote count, status pill, and type tag. Filter chips at the top of the board narrow by type or status as needed.
4

Feedback writes to the sidecar

Each vote and status change writes to the slug keyed sidecar, leaving the plugin settings unchanged. The plugin keeps managing the underlying menu_order values while SleekView gives manual ordering a review surface that finally exists.

Sample board

Sample Intuitive Custom Post Order review board

A peek at how manual ordering rules render on a SleekView Feedback board, with editors voting on the rules they rely on and developers retiring stale ones that nobody actually uses.
187 votes
Drag and drop on Case Studies stutters with 400 entries loaded
@gracerm Bug Investigating
142 votes
Add manual ordering for the Press Coverage CPT
Owen Brennan Feature request Planned
121 votes
Industry taxonomy ordering for the dropdown is live
Saoirse M. Idea Shipped
76 votes
Persist manual order across REST and GraphQL responses
@tasso.dev Feature request New
49 votes
Manual order on Author taxonomy reverts after bulk edit
Hazel G. Bug Investigating
8 votes
Retire manual order on Newsletter Archive, posts sort by date
Lior Peretz Idea Closed

Comparison

Default plugin settings vs SleekView Feedback

Default plugin settings

  • Settings page lists enabled types as checkboxes, no rule level scoring or notes
  • No way to see how many rows each rule actually orders manually right now
  • Editors cannot leave a vote, a comment, or a request next to a specific rule
  • Feedback about manual ordering lives in chat threads or never gets captured at all
  • Hard to spot rules enabled years ago that no editor relies on anymore

SleekView Feedback

  • Reads plugin settings live, no extra storage layer to maintain
  • Per rule vote, status pill, type tag, and row count rendered on a single card
  • Embed anywhere; gate by WP role so editors and developers see appropriate boards
  • Filter by type, status, or row count band to focus an audit precisely
  • Vote and status changes persist in a sidecar so plugin settings stay pristine

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for Intuitive Custom Post Order

Rules become browsable cards

Each enabled post type or taxonomy becomes a card with name, row count, status pill, and votes. The card makes invisible plugin settings visible and votable, which is the entire point of reviewing manual ordering at all.

Row counts as signal

The card shows how many rows the rule actually orders. A rule covering ten rows behaves very differently from one covering ten thousand. Pair row count with votes and you can spot small high value rules and large rules that nobody actually uses.

Per role boards by capability

Developers see every rule including private internal CPTs; editors see only the rules attached to types they author into; clients see only public types relevant to their site. WP roles drive visibility, all from a single plugin settings source.

Audience

Where a manual ordering feedback board pays off

Editor request queue

Run a board where editors propose enabling manual ordering on new post types or taxonomies. Each request carries votes, so developers ship the most demanded rules first and ignore one off asks that never accumulate.

Manual ordering audit

Use the board for periodic audits of all enabled rules. Sort by score and row count, mark zero engagement rules as deprecated, capture rationale in comments, and disable rules that no editor actually touches anymore.

Editor handover and onboarding

When new editors join, the board doubles as documentation: which post types are manually ordered, who originally asked for that, and which rules are considered load bearing today.

The bigger picture

Why ordering rules need a review surface

Intuitive Custom Post Order is the kind of plugin that quietly accumulates configuration. A new manager joins, asks for manual ordering on a post type, gets it, leaves a year later. The rule survives them, and the next editor never knows why a CPT still uses drag and drop instead of the obvious sort by date.

The plugin's settings lists every rule as a checkbox without context, so the entire system runs on tribal memory. SleekView Feedback fixes that. Each rule becomes a card with the row count, a vote total, a status pill, and a comment thread.

Editors who use a rule cast votes by clicking, not by writing replies in threads nobody can find. Sort by votes to see which rules earn their slot. Filter to large row counts and you can audit the rules that touch the most rows first.

Use comments to capture the reasoning, so the next editor reads the whole story in two minutes instead of asking around. Because votes and statuses live in a sidecar, the plugin's settings remain untouched, which keeps backups and migrations clean. The board adds the review layer that manual ordering needs and never had.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Intuitive Custom Post Order

Yes. The plugin's settings record is enough source data for the board. SleekView expands enabled types into one row per post type or taxonomy, fetches row counts from WordPress, and renders cards. No premium tier or extra plugin is required.

 

Votes and statuses live in a slug keyed sidecar table that SleekView maintains. That keeps the plugin's options untouched, which matters because the plugin is often updated quickly and you do not want your audit data tangled in its settings serialization.

 

Yes. Map the pill to whether the type appears in the plugin's enabled list and the pill flips automatically when admins toggle the rule. You can also map status to a workflow field with values like reviewing, planned, deprecated for richer process management.

 

SleekView counts rows in the matching post type or taxonomy and displays the count on the card. Filter facets let reviewers focus on rules covering large numbers (the high impact ones) or rules covering tiny numbers (often candidates for retirement).

 

Yes. Each SleekView block accepts its own source filter and role gate. Editors see public CPTs and visible taxonomies; developers see every enabled type including private internal CPTs. Both boards read the same plugin settings with different visibility rules.

 

The card disappears on the next board load, since SleekView queries the plugin settings live. The slug keyed sidecar keeps the historical vote and comment data, which is useful when stakeholders later request re-enabling the rule under the same type.

 

No. SleekView is read only against the plugin: it does not write to menu_order or to the plugin's settings. All vote and status data lives in the sidecar. The plugin continues to own the manual ordering values and writes them as it always has.

 

Notion and spreadsheets live outside WordPress, so the link between a row and the actual plugin rule is informal and easy to drift. SleekView Feedback reads the plugin settings directly and persists feedback against the rule's slug, so the source of truth stays inside WordPress across migrations and updates.

 

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