✨ 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 Tickera

SleekView Feedback reads Tickera ticket orders, attendee meta, and post event comments straight from the database, then renders them as upvotable cards with status pills like New, Planned, In progress, and Shipped so future attendees see which events and ticket types your audience keeps voting for.

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SleekView Feedback board for Tickera

Why Tickera reviews belong on a public board

Tickera stores ticket templates as the tc_tickets_template post type in wp_posts, with orders in wp_tc_orders and attendee meta on the ticket. Comments attendees leave live in the standard wp_comments table joined to the event post. The default Tickera dashboard shows sales totals and a check in scanner, which is fine for the gate but useless when a future buyer wants to read what real ticket holders thought of the VIP tier last year.

SleekView Feedback reads the same comments and ticket meta, groups them by event, ticket type, or venue, and renders one card per item sorted by votes. Each card shows the comment title, the running vote count, the attendee first name, a category pill like Tier or Topic, and a status pill that tracks whether your organiser team has acted on the note. Filter chips let visitors narrow to a single event, ticket type, or status so the loudest signal stays one scroll from the page hero.

When a future attendee clicks Upvote on a comment that matches what they want next time, the count writes back into Tickera comment meta, so the sorting reflects real demand instead of recency. Organisers see at a glance which ticket tiers get the most love, which session complaints keep coming back, and which new perk attendees keep asking for, all from one board reading straight from Tickera.

Workflow

From Tickera ticket sales to a live board

1

Connect SleekView to Tickera

Install SleekView and add a data source for tc_tickets_template posts joined to wp_comments and the tc_orders table. SleekView auto-detects Tickera tables and the comment fields that the public front end already writes when attendees comment on an event page after a session ends.
2

Pick the vote column and the status

Switch the view to Feedback and choose the vote counter on the comment as the sort column. Pick the organiser status meta for the badge and the Tickera ticket type taxonomy for the chip on each card. Pills get colored from a palette you control in the view settings panel.
3

Set what shows on each card

Put the comment title, the event name, the attendee handle, and the running count on the card front. Add the ticket type or the venue when the comment is a tier note so finance and the programme team can both read the board from a single view without switching screens between tools.
4

Open upvotes to attendees

Enable the Upvote button for logged in roles and SleekView writes increments back to comment meta. New tier requests submitted on the board land as comments on the closest upcoming event with the chosen category preset, so feedback flows straight back into the Tickera archive without extra plumbing.

Sample board

Sample Tickera attendee feedback board

Six post event notes pulled from Tickera comments on last month's ticketed event, sorted by upvotes so the loudest signal for the next sale window sits at the top of the board.
278 votes
VIP backstage tier was completely worth the upgrade fee this year
Sarah K. Ticket tier Shipped
224 votes
Add a two day combo ticket for next year's main festival weekend
@dev_marcus Ticket request Planned
171 votes
QR codes on PDF tickets refuse to scan with darker theme overlays
Priya S. Bug In progress
142 votes
Bring back the student discount tier for the developer track
Oliver T. Ticket request Under review
78 votes
Loved the printable wallet ticket option for offline venues
Marta L. Praise Shipped
30 votes
Ticket transfer form returns an empty error on Firefox mobile
@tomek_dev Bug Open

Comparison

Tickera reports vs SleekView Feedback

Tickera order reports

  • Tickera reports sit in the admin and never roll up into a public, sortable feedback board
  • No upvotes, so a single loud ticket holder counts the same as twenty quiet check ins
  • Status workflow lives only in your inbox, future buyers never see how a request landed
  • No category chip beyond ticket type, so session and venue complaints blur together over time
  • Organisers stitch together CSV exports just to find which tier request actually keeps repeating

SleekView Feedback

  • Reads ticket templates, orders, and attendee comments directly from Tickera with no sync layer
  • Upvotes write back to wp_commentmeta so the source of truth stays inside WordPress
  • Status pills cover New, Replied, In progress, Planned, Shipped, and Declined out of the box
  • Filter by event, ticket type, or venue with chips drawn from your Tickera template taxonomy
  • Top-voted requests float to the top so the loudest signal sits one scroll from the page hero

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for Tickera

Upvotes wired into Tickera comments

Each Upvote click increments a meta key on the underlying comment row, so SleekView, the event page, and any reporting dashboards stay aligned without nightly syncs. Rate limiting and IP throttling protect the count from drive-by abuse on popular ticket pages during early bird windows.

Filter by ticket type and event

Category chips pull straight from the Tickera ticket template taxonomy, so attendees can drill into a VIP, General, or Student tier in one click. Organisers use the same chips to triage the queue by tier, then sort by votes or recency depending on the day's planning meeting.

Status pills your team trusts

New, Replied, In progress, Planned, Shipped, and Declined render as colored pills on every card. The same status meta drives a kanban view if you also enable SleekView Kanban, so one status column powers both the public board and the private operations workflow without duplication.

Audience

Where a Tickera feedback board pays off

Paid festivals and conferences

Pool post event ratings per ticket tier, then let attendees upvote what they want next year. Programme teams ship a tier mix that paying attendees voted into existence with their own clicks instead of guessing the next breakdown.

Training and certification events

Group feedback by certification level or trainer, then surface upvoted requests for new modules or exam dates. The board doubles as a public roadmap that paying students helped shape, which lifts repeat ticket sales for every following cohort.

Concert and tour promoters

Show which line ups keep selling out and which ones need a refresh. Status pills let promoters flag when feedback led to a real change, so future buyers see follow through instead of a silent comment thread on every event page.

The bigger picture

Why a public board beats hidden Tickera reports

Most organisers running Tickera already collect great post event feedback, it just never makes it past the admin reports or the inbox. A future buyer deciding whether to grab a VIP pass has no way to see which complaint your team actually fixed last year, or which new tier finally shipped after a hundred upvotes. That gap costs trust on every comparison search, because the social proof exists but stays invisible.

SleekView Feedback gives the same data a public surface that feels like a modern roadmap tool. Comments and ticket meta show up as cards with vote counts, statuses, and category pills, so a single board answers questions like which tier delivers the best experience, which session complaint keeps coming back, and which new perk attendees keep asking for. The data never moves, the source of truth stays inside Tickera, and yet the page reads like a Canny board purpose built for ticketed events.

Over a few seasons, that board becomes a living portfolio of how your tour listens to its audience, and that portfolio converts skeptical visitors into ticket buyers far better than a sold out badge ever could.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for Tickera

Yes. SleekView reads the same ticket templates, orders, and attendee meta that the free Tickera version writes, so the integration works without the paid add-ons. If you run paid extensions that store extra meta like NPS or rating, SleekView picks up those keys automatically and exposes them on each card.

 

The count writes back to a meta key on the underlying comment row in wp_commentmeta. SleekView debounces clicks per session and per IP, so a single attendee cannot inflate the total by refreshing or opening a couple of private windows in a row to vote on the same feedback card.

 

Yes if you turn submissions on. New requests land as comments on the closest upcoming event with the chosen ticket type preselected. The default board is read and upvote only, which keeps the surface area small and abuse low during heavy public sale windows before the next event.

 

Status comes from any column you point at, so a workflow meta key like request_status drives the pills. Your team updates the status from the comment edit screen or a custom admin column, and SleekView reflects the change on the public board within the next cache window without a manual reload.

 

No. SleekView pages results server side and caches the rendered card list per filter, so a board with tens of thousands of comments loads as quickly as a board with a hundred. Upvotes use a lightweight admin-ajax endpoint that does not bootstrap full template rendering on each click.

 

Yes. SleekView respects standard WordPress comment approval flags, so unapproved comments stay hidden. You can also add a private meta flag and exclude it in the data source filter, which is handy for comments that mention sensitive details or that you redirect to a private organiser thread.

 

Canny and FeatureBase are great, but they live outside WordPress and require copying data across systems, paying per seat, and stitching SSO. SleekView Feedback uses the data you already have in Tickera, ships as a one time license, and renders inside your existing theme with your own brand on top.

 

Yes. SleekView reads the post and comment language meta that WPML and Polylang already write, so a board on the English event page only surfaces English comments. You can also expose a language category chip if you want a single board that lets attendees filter across languages without leaving the page.

 

Pricing

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