✨ 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
✨ 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 PeepSo Groups

SleekView Feedback reads a feedback source on the same site as your PeepSo Groups module, picks any numeric column for votes and any column for status, and renders a public board where members upvote group ideas, request features, and watch progress without leaving your PeepSo community at any point.

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SleekView Feedback board for PeepSo Groups

Why PeepSo Groups needs a public feedback board

PeepSo Groups stores each group as a custom post in wp_posts, with member roles in wp_peepso_group_users and per-group settings in wp_postmeta. The module handles join flows and group activity well, but there is no built in surface inside the admin where members can ask for new group behavior, flag a broken invite, or vote on which UX fix the team should ship next sprint.

Most communities patch this with a pinned activity post, a Google Form, or a separate roadmap tool. Each of those tools collects requests in its own database, with its own auth, and someone on the team has to keep the WordPress side in sync by hand. The list of open ideas drifts out of date, members log the same request three times, and nobody knows whether the team actually plans to ship the change or not before the next release.

SleekView Feedback points at a small custom post type on the same site, picks the vote_count meta field for upvotes and the status meta for badges, and turns the data into one public board scoped to groups. Members vote with their existing PeepSo account, the counts write straight back to the source row, and admins moderate from the same WordPress screens they already use every day for group moderation work and member review.

Workflow

Launch a PeepSo Groups feedback board in four steps

1

Connect SleekView to a groups ideas source

Install SleekView and create a small custom post type for groups feedback, or reuse an existing source. SleekView reads the rows directly, with no export job, no separate database, and no parallel auth to keep aligned with the rest of your PeepSo Groups configuration or the member roles already in place.
2

Pick the vote and status columns

Choose the numeric meta field that holds the upvote count and the meta or taxonomy that holds the status. Map each status value to a color so Open, Planned, In progress, Shipped, and Declined all render as clear badges on every group related card on the board for members to scan quickly at a glance.
3

Decide what shows on each card

Pick the fields that should appear on the front of each card: title, submitter display name, the group context the idea is about, category tag, status pill, and vote count. SleekView keeps the card compact so members can scan a column of related ideas without losing track of which group each request belongs to.
4

Open submissions to your members

Turn on the submit button, choose which roles can post and which can vote, and pick the form that captures new ideas. Submissions land as standard posts, votes increment the meta field straight on the source row, and admins moderate from one screen instead of jumping between several tools for each workflow.

Sample board

Sample PeepSo Groups feedback board

A live PeepSo Groups board showing member-submitted ideas sorted by upvote count, with status badges for Open, Planned, In progress, Shipped, and Declined, plus category tags per item.
362 votes
Let group admins schedule a post to publish at a specific time
Aurora B. Feature request Planned
289 votes
Group invite emails are sent twice when accepting from mobile
@mobile_mod Bug In progress
246 votes
Add subgroups so a big community can split into focused rooms
Khalid R. Feature request Open
172 votes
Group cover photo is cropped weirdly on mobile feed cards
@mobile_eye UX Shipped
104 votes
Bulk approve pending join requests from one screen
Sora N. Feature request Shipped
51 votes
Banned members can still see member counts on private group pages
@privacy_p Privacy Open

Comparison

Default PeepSo Groups vs SleekView Feedback

Default Groups admin

  • Group posts and member rosters live in custom tables with no shared place for ideas.
  • Pinned activity posts about groups collect replies, but never show a clear vote count.
  • There is no built in status badge for Planned, In progress, Shipped, or Declined items.
  • Sorting group ideas by an upvote field needs custom code or another plugin to wire up.
  • Admins cannot show one public board for group feedback without rebuilding the page.

SleekView Feedback

  • Reads any numeric meta key as the vote count, including a custom group_votes field.
  • Status badges pull from any taxonomy or meta value, with one color per configured status.
  • Upvote button writes straight back to the source row, no parallel votes table to maintain.
  • Submission form uses any PeepSo or WordPress form shortcode you already trust on the site.
  • Group role rules from PeepSo apply to who can see and vote on each card on the board.

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for PeepSo Groups

Votes that live in your data

Every upvote increments a meta field on the original feedback post row. There is no parallel votes table to back up, no external service holding the counts, and any reports or exports you already run against your PeepSo Groups data pick up the new vote totals with no extra wiring needed for any of the existing dashboards.

Status badges with real meaning

Map each status value to a colored badge so Open, Planned, In progress, Shipped, and Declined are clear at a glance. Members understand which group ideas the team picked up, which ones are waiting for input, and which ones will not happen, without reading a single comment or release note this quarter.

Privacy stays first class

Privacy ideas like banned member visibility, hidden group listings, and join request reasons can be tagged as a Privacy category and ranked on the same board. Members see how much demand each idea has, and the team can ship the highest voted ones with clear cover from the community.

Audience

PeepSo Groups teams that put feedback in public

Hobby and interest groups

A community made of dozens of hobby groups uses the board to collect ideas about subgroups, scheduled posts, and group themes. The team can plan changes from real demand rather than the single thread that happened to be busiest in any one group last week.

Course cohort groups

Course teams use groups per cohort. The board surfaces ideas about join request reasons, weekly digests, and member onboarding, and the team can ship the highest voted items quarter by quarter without guessing what cohort leads actually need from each module.

Paid membership groups

Paying members get a private board where their requests carry visible weight. Admins use the vote counts to plan the next quarter of group features and reply on the same cards instead of in a separate document that no member opens a second time.

The bigger picture

Why a feedback board steadies a PeepSo group experience

Groups carry a lot of the weight in a PeepSo community. They are where members make real relationships, plan meetups, and share work in progress, and that means every change to the group flow is felt at the personal level. PeepSo Groups ships a solid default, but every community wants small changes to invites, roles, or layouts, and without a shared feedback surface there is no easy way to know which changes the membership actually wants.

A board fixes that. Each request becomes a card with a vote count and a status badge, so a member who is about to file a duplicate request can see the original on the board with three hundred upvotes and a Planned label. That single change reduces duplicate threads, makes the queue of work honest, and gives community leads a calm way to say no in public without breaking the relationship over time.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for PeepSo Groups

Yes. Upvotes increment the meta key you picked as the vote column on the original feedback row. There is no parallel votes table, no external service, and any reports or exports you already run against the feedback data pick up the new counts as soon as each vote is cast on the board by a member.

 

Yes. The submit button opens the form you choose, posts the new idea into the same source table the board reads, and shows it on the board with zero votes and the default status. Members never see a separate submission form or a parallel database to sign in to at any point during the flow.

 

Boards respect the same PeepSo and WordPress role rules the rest of your site uses. Cards from a private group context only appear for members who can already read that group, and the same role checks gate who can vote, comment, or submit a new idea about how the group module should behave.

 

Yes. A board can read from one group, several groups, or every group on the site. Filters along the top let members narrow the view by group, category, or status, and the URL updates so leads can share a filtered view of just the ideas that matter to a particular group at any given time.

 

Cards stay on the board because the data lives on the feedback row, not on the deleted group or member record. The author display name shifts to a generic deleted account label, the vote count is preserved, and the status stays whatever the admin team last set, so the public history is not lost.

 

Yes. Any post taxonomy or meta key can drive the category tag on each card. Most teams use a small set like Feature request, Bug, UX, and Privacy, with one color per category, so members can scan the board and filter to the kind of work they are most interested in voting on right now.

 

Yes. SleekView ships with role-based permissions, so you can let logged in members vote, restrict submissions to paying members, or open both to everyone. Limits are checked on the server side so the rules cannot be bypassed by editing the page or replaying the request from a separate tab.

 

Yes. SleekView pages the board, only loads the cards on screen, and uses indexed columns for the vote and status filters. Installs with thousands of active groups stay responsive because the heavy fields are only fetched for the feedback cards the visitor is actually looking at on the current page.

 

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