✨ 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 User Registration Sites

User Registration handles signups, login, and profile fields for thousands of WordPress sites. SleekView Feedback uses the same accounts and roles to power a board where registered users vote, post, and watch status pills move without ever leaving your site.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView Feedback board for User Registration

A board that fits your existing signups

User Registration creates standard WordPress accounts via custom forms and stores extra profile data as user meta. SleekView Feedback reads those same accounts, roles, and meta values when it decides who can read, post, and vote on every board. There is no second user table and no separate login to manage.

Pick a custom post type that holds your ideas, bind SleekView to it, and choose the columns that drive vote count, status, and category. The Feedback view renders one card per row, sorted by votes, with a colored status pill, a category tag, and the member's display name. Each upvote writes back to the source row and re-sorts the board.

Because gating reads WordPress role and meta values live, a deactivated account loses write access at once, a role promotion unlocks the right board immediately, and a profile field can gate a board to a specific segment, like Marketing or Engineering. The board, the signups, and the roadmap all live inside WordPress with no third party voting tool on top.

Workflow

From User Registration accounts to a board

1

Pick or create an ideas post type

Reuse a Suggestions post type or create one in seconds. SleekView reads its posts and meta fields, then lets you bind vote count, status, and category columns. The bindings persist, so new ideas appear on the board automatically as they publish.
2

Bind roles or meta to access

Choose which user roles, or which profile field values, can read, post, and vote per board. SleekView uses standard WordPress capability checks plus a meta filter on every render, so changes propagate immediately without any sync or admin step in between.
3

Members shape the roadmap

Logged-in registered users in the right segment tap Upvote on the cards they care about. The new count writes back to the source row via the REST API, and the board re-sorts on the next render. Members can also post new ideas through an inline form.
4

Admins close the loop

Move cards between Open, Planned, In progress, Shipped, and Declined with one dropdown per card. Each status maps to a colored pill members understand at a glance. The roadmap conversation lives in WordPress comments, indexed and searchable forever.

Sample board

Sample User Registration voice board

Six cards from a User Registration site that runs an open community plus a paid newsletter. The mix highlights what registered users surface when they finally get a place to vote on changes.
263 votes
Allow social login alongside email and password signup
Iris H. Feature request Planned
217 votes
Add a public profile page with avatar and bio
Mark B. Community In progress
184 votes
Members lose progress if the registration form errors out
@noor_r Bug Shipped
139 votes
Add a forgot password flow that does not require a captcha
Linus F. UX Open
97 votes
Newsletter opt-in checkbox should not be checked by default
Priya N. Privacy Open
36 votes
Send a follow up email two weeks after signup with tips
Aaron S. Communications Declined

Comparison

SaaS voting widget vs SleekView Feedback

External voting widget

  • Sits on the SaaS vendor's domain so registered users log in twice and trust a new brand.
  • Charges per active user each month, scaling against the size of your account list.
  • Can not read WordPress roles or User Registration profile meta natively, so gating drifts.
  • Renders in an iframe that fights your theme and ships third party scripts on every page.
  • Owns the reply email branding, so members hear from a stranger instead of your site.

SleekView Feedback

  • Reads WordPress roles and user meta live so gating tracks the real signup state.
  • Members read, vote, and post on the same site they already log into for content.
  • Status writes back to the source post so the roadmap stays inside WordPress.
  • One flat license, never billed by registered user count or monthly upvote volume.
  • Renders inside your theme so cards inherit your fonts, colors, and spacing exactly.

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for User Registration

Upvotes that write back to the row

Each upvote writes back to the source row through the REST API and re-sorts the board without a full reload. SleekView dedupes votes by user ID so refresh attempts and shared accounts can not inflate counts. New totals persist across sessions, devices, and browsers.

Gating from roles and meta

Read, post, and vote access each map to specific WordPress roles, plus optional meta filters from User Registration profile fields. Role changes and meta updates propagate to the board on the next request with no admin step, no sync window, and no extra user list to maintain.

Status and category in clean pills

Bind any column to a colored status pill and any column to a category tag with six accessible palettes. Cards stay readable at every density, and admins move items between Open, Planned, In progress, Shipped, and Declined right on the card without leaving the page.

Audience

What User Registration sites build with it

Open community wishlist

Anyone with an account can read and vote, and verified members can post. The board surfaces what registered users want next without you having to run another survey or read another long support thread that scrolls past in chat.

Segmented board by profile meta

Use a profile field like industry or plan to gate a board to one segment. Marketing members get their own roadmap board, engineers get another, and the signal stays sharp because each board is scoped to the audience that cares about that surface area.

Bug board for signup and login issues

Members report broken registration steps, failed logins, and email delivery problems through a Bug category. Vote weight tells engineering which bugs hit many users so the queue is sorted by impact, not by who shouted in support most loudly this week.

The bigger picture

Why registration sites need a member board

Sites built around User Registration usually run a long tail of free or low priced accounts, and that is exactly the setup where silent churn is hardest to see. A free member who is mildly unhappy almost never opens a ticket. They stop opening the welcome series, skip the community event, and disappear from the analytics two months later.

None of that ever turns into a clear data point you can act on, which means roadmap decisions get made from noise rather than signal. A public board fixes that because every idea is visible, every upvote counted, and every status update public. Members type the friction the day it happens, see they are not alone, and stay engaged with the site waiting to see what lands next.

Hosting it on User Registration accounts matters because gating has to use the same accounts and meta your forms already collect. A third party tool means another user list to maintain, a second login to ask for, and a brand whiplash that erodes trust. SleekView Feedback reads WordPress roles and user meta live, the board lives inside the same site members already trust, and there is no SaaS bill stacked on top of an audience you are still working hard to grow.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for User Registration

No. It uses standard WordPress roles and capabilities, which User Registration already creates on signup. You can run a fully featured board on a site that only uses User Registration plus standard roles like Subscriber. Premium membership plugins are supported but not required to gate boards by read, post, and vote actions.

 

On every request, SleekView calls the standard WordPress role functions and reads user meta directly. There is no cached token and no nightly sync. If you change a user's role or update a profile field, the post and vote buttons appear or disappear on the next page render with no admin step required.

 

Yes. Each Feedback view block accepts an optional meta filter alongside role rules. You can scope a board to users whose profile field matches one or more values, so a single registration form can power multiple segmented boards without any extra plumbing or sync between them and your accounts.

 

Past votes stay attached to the cards so the historical signal is preserved. The deactivated account loses the ability to vote or post on any board. If the account is reactivated later, all rights come back on the next page request automatically, with no manual reset or sync step required to restore access.

 

Yes. Each board has its own list of public statuses, so you can show Open, Planned, and Shipped to members while keeping In progress and Declined as admin only. The status column on the source row stays the source of truth, and SleekView only renders the statuses you allow for each viewer.

 

It feels native. The Feedback view renders as semantic HTML using your theme styles, so cards inherit your fonts, colors, and spacing. There are no iframes and no third party scripts. Registered users see your brand on every card and every status change, which keeps trust high across the site experience.

 

Yes. Status changes fire a WordPress action that any notification plugin or custom code can listen for. Many User Registration sites use this to email the original poster and every upvoter when a card ships, which doubles as a re-engagement nudge and a public proof that signups translate into roadmap influence.

 

No. SleekView caches query results and only re-queries on vote or status change. The block is lazy loaded so it does not block initial paint. There are no third party requests for fonts, analytics, or scripts. Core Web Vitals stay healthy even on member dashboards loaded with profile forms and active sessions.

 

Pricing

More than 1000+
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