SleekView Feedback for Nextend Social Login
Nextend Social Login wires social providers like Google, Apple, and Facebook into WordPress signup and login. SleekView Feedback turns those rows into a sortable board so members and admins can upvote provider ideas, flag broken logins, and track which integration fixes actually ship.
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From Nextend providers to a live admin board
Nextend Social Login stores every configured provider, every linked user, and every login event in its own options and meta tables inside your WordPress install. Each row carries the provider name like Google or Apple, the OAuth credentials, the linked WordPress user ID, and the login timestamp. The admin works for one site owner wiring up Google once, but it offers no shared way for members to flag a broken provider login or vote up the next integration.
SleekView Feedback reads any Nextend source you point it at, including the provider settings in options, the usermeta rows that hold linked social IDs, or a custom query against the login event log. It renders one card per provider or feature idea, sorted by upvotes, with a status pill, a category tag, and a vote button that writes straight back to the source row column you chose for votes.
You stop chasing social login feedback through inbox threads and Slack messages. Members and site admins land on a clean board, upvote the providers they want next, downflag broken logins that hurt onboarding, and your roadmap stops drifting from what your community actually needs to join the site in one click from their existing identity.
Workflow
From Nextend rows to a public board
Pick the Nextend source
usermeta, or login event logs in custom tables all work fine. Apply any WHERE clause to filter by provider, role, or signup source so the board only shows the rows you want members reacting to.
Map vote, status, category
Embed the feedback view
Votes write back to Nextend
Sample board
Sample Nextend Social Login feedback board
Comparison
Nextend admin vs SleekView Feedback
Nextend admin screen
- Provider settings live in an admin screen only site owners ever open daily
- No way for members to upvote which OAuth providers get wired up next sprint
- Login bug reports get lost in support email threads no one revisits later
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Linked accounts sit in
usermetawith no shared admin feedback view - No public queue showing members which providers are queued, drafted, or live
SleekView Feedback
- One card per Nextend provider or feature with title, votes, status pill, category tag
- Upvote writes back to the source column so planning sorts by member score
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Filter by provider, role, or signup source using any column already in
usermeta - Embed on a public page or behind a member login with one shortcode or block
- Admins stop chasing emails and start reading member votes in WordPress
Features
What SleekView Feedback gives you for Nextend Social Login
Provider review built in
Each Nextend Social Login provider becomes a votable card with title, OAuth status, and active link count. Members see which providers the community wants, which logins feel broken, and which integrations are coming. The board acts as a living changelog of your social signup line without any spreadsheet.
Login bug flags inline
Add a login bug category and members flag any broken provider flow with one click. The flag lives next to the source row, so your admin can fix the OAuth wiring before the next member tries to join instead of learning from a wave of stuck signup tickets piled up after an iOS update.
Upvotes feed back into planning
Because votes write to the source column, you can sort Nextend requests by member score, give high voted providers more sprint budget, and quietly retire ones nobody used. The feedback loop stops being a guess and becomes a real number you can defend in any roadmap meeting at standup.
Audience
How admins use the Nextend feedback board
Social signup triage
Admins upvote the Nextend provider ideas worth shipping and downflag login bugs that hurt signups. The board replaces a messy support inbox and gives the site lead one screen to triage OAuth fixes before the next marketing campaign drives a wave of new registrations from social.
Member facing provider vote
Sites share the board with their members so users can vote on which Nextend providers get added next. Members see what is queued and feel in control of the signup path without ever needing admin access to the WordPress site or the Nextend settings panel at all.
Login audit queue
Site leads use the board as a login audit queue. Anything flagged as a broken provider or wrong email mapping gets reviewed first, and resolved items move to a Fixed status so the audit trail is visible without trawling individual login event history one row at a time across providers.
The bigger picture
Why a Nextend feedback board changes social signups
Nextend Social Login is great at wiring social providers like Google, Apple, and Facebook into WordPress signup and login. It is much weaker at giving site admins a shared view of which providers actually matter to members and which OAuth flows are silently breaking after every iOS update or Facebook API change. Most sites end up with a back office full of provider settings and a support inbox full of stuck signups, and the two never quite meet.
Admins miss the providers that would lift signups, broken OAuth flows keep hurting onboarding, and members lose patience because their feedback seems to disappear into a black hole. A feedback board changes that pattern. Provider ideas stop being one off artifacts and start being something the community reacts to in the open.
Upvotes give you a cheap, honest signal about which providers deserve more sprint time. Login flags give you a backlog sorted by impact instead of by whoever shouted loudest in the last support email. And because everything writes back to the source row, the next time you open Nextend you already know which providers earned attention.
The result is fewer broken signups, fewer abandoned registrations, and a much shorter loop between the OAuth pain a new member hits today and the fix that ships tomorrow.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Nextend Social Login
No. SleekView Feedback reads directly from whatever table or option Nextend is using. You point it at the source, pick the columns for votes, status, category, author, and title, and the board renders. No ETL job, no sync, and no duplicated data. Anything Nextend writes shows up on the next page load.
 Yes. SleekView ships with anonymous voting backed by cookies, so public visitors can upvote provider ideas without an account. You can also require login if you want the board restricted to active members, and the same view handles both modes with a single setting toggle in the WordPress admin.
 Each visitor gets a cookie scoped vote token per item, and logged in users are tracked by user ID. The plugin also exposes a per IP rate limit so a single visitor cannot spam the board, which is enough to keep public boards honest without forcing a full signup wall in front of casual visitors.
 Yes. SleekView accepts a WHERE clause when you wire up the data source, so you can scope the board to one provider, one role, or any combination of meta fields Nextend Social Login already stores. Different boards on different pages can use different filters with no extra plugin setup.
 Login feedback is just a category value on the row. You can write it into a meta key Nextend already understands or a dedicated column. Either way it shows up in the WordPress admin next to the original provider config, so the admin can see the flag without leaving WordPress for any other tool.
 They write back to the source column, which means Nextend and any of your own queries can sort future planning, retries, and provider lists by that score. Several admins use the score to gate which providers get wired up at all, which makes the board operational and not just a vanity dashboard.
 Both. SleekView ships as a Gutenberg block, an Elementor widget, a Bricks element, and a classic shortcode. Theme developers can also call the render function from PHP and pass a configuration array, so you can mount the board on any template without touching the page editor at all.
 The view paginates server side and only loads the rows it needs to render the current page. Indexed columns stay fast even on long tables. For really big sites, scoping the board by provider or role keeps both the query and the audience focused, so the page feels snappy even at scale.
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