SleekView Feedback for Media Library Organizer
SleekView Feedback reads Media Library Organizer category rows, attachment relations, and any custom field straight from the WordPress database, then renders an upvotable card per row. Editors vote on folder polish, your team works the queue, and the library stays canonical.
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Why Media Library Organizer sites need a board
Media Library Organizer stores folder categories as standard WordPress taxonomy terms under a custom mlo_category type, with item ordering and per category settings in the term meta. The plugin handles drag and drop categories, fast filters, and bulk move tools beautifully, but editor feedback about folder behaviour usually arrives in scattered Slack pings and tickets nobody triages on a fixed schedule.
SleekView Feedback turns the Media Library Organizer term tree or a dedicated requests CPT into a public style board. Each row becomes a card with the request title, the editor display name from the linked user, a category tag from a folder or tag taxonomy, a status pill, and a vote count. Editors vote on folder tweaks, and the queue orders itself by upvotes automatically.
Upvotes write straight back to the source row, so the count matches every Media Library Organizer export and every Sleek chart you point at the same data. A Charts view can plot top requested folder tools by team, a Kanban view groups items by triage stage, and the Table view stays available for any ops lead who prefers a raw spreadsheet over cards.
Workflow
From MLO data to a feedback board
Point SleekView at MLO
Pick vote, status, category
Tie cards to folder term
Embed and let editors vote
Sample board
Sample MLO folder feedback board
Comparison
MLO admin vs SleekView Feedback
Default MLO folder view
- MLO admin lists categories as a tree with no vote column for editor requests today
- Editor feedback lands in scattered Slack pings that no developer triages on time anyhow
- Status changes mean opening each ticket in another tool and editing the fields by hand
- Editors cannot rank what they want fixed, so folder tooling relies on developer guesses
- Canny and FeatureBase boards live outside WordPress and never see the MLO category meta
SleekView Feedback
- Reads any Media Library Organizer term and joined attachment rows directly from the schema
- Vote counts persist on the folder term so reports and exports stay in sync forever after
- Category pills come from folder or tag taxonomies with six built in colour choices each one
- Status badges mirror Open, Triaged, In progress, and Resolved with custom labels too now
- Folder icon preview surfaces the actual category so editors triage with fewer clicks each
Features
What SleekView Feedback gives you for Media Library Organizer
Upvotes that survive category moves
Each upvote increments the chosen meta key on the source category term inside one SQL update, so MLO exports, custom queries, and Sleek charts all see the same total. The count never disagrees with library.
Folder aware editor cards
Each card surfaces the live category name and icon next to the title, so editors see exactly which folder is reported. No more guessing which path a colleague flagged in a chat thread or which folder owns the issue.
Status pills for tooling work
Open, Triaged, In progress, Resolved, Declined, and any custom MLO label renders as a coloured badge. Staff drag cards between statuses, and every move writes back to the source category term right away.
Audience
Three teams running an MLO board
Editorial newsrooms
Newsrooms run a Folder Tooling board where editors flag MLO pain points like search scope or bulk move. Top requests get triaged by the design team, and Charts shows which areas recur most.
Marketing content teams
Marketing teams use Media Library Organizer to organise campaign assets, then add a SleekView board for owners to suggest folder tweaks. Reports stay tied to live folders through the same source rows.
Agency creative studios
Agencies organise client assets in MLO categories. A shared board surfaces editor feedback across every site so the team triages in one place rather than per client folder structure.
The bigger picture
Why a board beats Slack for MLO feedback
Media Library Organizer brings drag and drop sanity to the WordPress media library, but every editorial team eventually drowns in scattered Slack pings, support tickets, and folder tooling requests nobody can rank by demand or filter by category. A board changes the shape of that workflow in one move. Every folder request becomes a public card with a folder icon, a vote count, a category pill, and a status badge that tells the editor exactly where their report sits in triage.
The design team works an ordered queue, editors see issues acknowledged the moment they move to Triaged, and the board keeps reports tied to live folders inside WordPress. Media Library Organizer already stores every category and every attachment relation, so the data is right there. The board just gives editors a place to point at it before the next campaign asset drop fills the library.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Media Library Organizer
SleekView reads Media Library Organizer data directly from the WordPress database, so any version of the plugin that writes its category taxonomy and attachment meta to the standard schema works. The free build and MLO Pro expose the same shape, so the board renders the same way.
 Yes. Voting uses the front end SleekView shortcode, so any signed in editor can click the upvote button on a board page without ever touching the admin area. Capabilities drive each role, and you can scope the board to authors and editors only if your site wants that.
 Votes live on the source category term as a meta field, so category moves, renames, and bulk attachment shuffles never touch the count. The plugin only writes to its own folder keys, and the board count keeps accumulating across every reorganisation pass without drift.
 Yes. SleekView reads the category term on each report and renders the live category name and icon next to the title using the standard MLO tree state. Editors see which folder each report is about without opening the media library uploader area.
 SleekView marks the card as orphaned and surfaces it in a separate filter so staff can decide whether to remove the report or keep it as historical signal. The vote count is preserved either way, and you can flip a setting to auto archive orphans nightly.
 Yes. Each card opens a detail panel with a comment thread powered by the standard WordPress comments table. Staff replies are flagged as official, and email notifications reuse whichever transactional mail layer your WordPress site uses for comment threads.
 Yes. SleekView reads every meta key on the category term, not just the standard MLO ones, so custom fields for folder owner, project tag, or campaign code can sort, filter, and group the same way as the built in fields the plugin writes to the database.
 SleekView paginates results, indexes the vote column on first load, and caches rendered cards through the standard WordPress object cache. A board with thousands of category requests and hundreds of voters renders well under a second on shared hosting infrastructure.
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