✨ 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 WP Property Listings

WP Property Listings registers a property_listing post type with meta for price, location, beds, and baths. SleekView renders one feedback card per listing, lets agents and visitors upvote, and tags entries with status badges so listing review stays inside WordPress.

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SleekView Feedback board for WP Property Listings

Listing reviews built on the WP Property Listings schema

WP Property Listings keeps every entry in wp_posts as a property_listing post type, with taxonomies for property_category, property_status, and property_location, and meta fields like wppl_price, wppl_bedrooms, and wppl_size in wp_postmeta. The default admin gives you a sortable list table and a per-listing editor, but no public-facing way to see which listings get the most attention, which look broken, or which the moderation team has already triaged this week.

SleekView reads those tables directly and renders one feedback card per listing. Pick a numeric column like the listing view count meta as the vote weight, attach a wppl_review_status meta for the status badge, and pull the property_location taxonomy as the chip. Agents and visitors can upvote a listing card to flag stale info or to highlight a high-demand home, and the increment writes back to the meta key you choose so reporting stays consistent.

Because SleekView is read-only against the WP Property Listings records, the existing admin keeps managing listings and renewals exactly as before. SleekView only adds a parallel review surface that ranks listings by votes, shows location chips, and exposes status pills so anyone on the team can spot Active, Pending, Sold, and Flagged listings at a glance.

Workflow

From property_listing to a public feedback wall

1

Point SleekView at property_listing

Create a new view, select the property_listing post type and pull in the wppl taxonomies and meta fields. SleekView ingests the records, respects published versus draft state, and refreshes whenever WP Property Listings saves a listing through its admin or frontend submission flow.
2

Pick vote, status, and category

Choose a numeric meta like view count for vote weight, the wppl_review_status meta for the status pill, and the property_location taxonomy as the chip. SleekView color-codes each value so Active, Pending, Sold, and Flagged listings stand out instantly inside the feedback grid.
3

Embed the board on a public page

Drop the SleekView block on a Listing Feedback or Top Properties page. Visitors see a ranked grid of listing cards with view counts, location chips, and status badges, and agents get a side panel listing the most upvoted entries at the top of the queue.
4

Upvotes write back to meta

Every Upvote click writes an increment to the meta key you mapped, so the score lives next to the listing post and is visible alongside WP Property Listings custom columns. You can also pipe the column into a saved agent dashboard without leaving WordPress at all.

Sample board

Sample WP Property Listings review board

A small slice of how a Listing Feedback page looks once SleekView indexes the property_listing posts with view count as the vote score and a wppl_review_status meta key driving the status pill.
256 votes
Suburban home listing missing the basement detail in the layout
Priya N. Listing issue In progress
211 votes
Map embed on rural property type shows the wrong neighborhood
@maxlocal Bug Open
162 votes
Add a saved alert filter for school zone radius search
Aisha B. Feature request Planned
115 votes
Sold listing still appears in the home page featured slider
Marco T. Stale config Shipped
71 votes
Lot dimensions column missing for one specific listing category
Lena K. Bug Shipped
21 votes
Duplicate listing submitted from two agents at the same brokerage
@hrjordan Duplicate Declined

Comparison

Default WP Property Listings versus SleekView

Default WP Property Listings

  • Admin-only listing list table with no public upvote, status pill, or location chip view surface
  • No way for visitors or agents to surface broken listings without filing a separate support ticket
  • Active, pending, and sold listings sit in the same admin list with only a small status column
  • Filtering by review state requires URL hacks or a custom admin column to be useful day to day
  • Listing review counts and inquiry signals live in spreadsheets instead of the listing post meta

SleekView Feedback

  • Reads property_listing posts plus wppl_price, wppl_bedrooms, and location terms
  • Upvote button writes back to your chosen meta key so the score lives with the listing post
  • Status pills map cleanly to Active, Pending, Sold, and Flagged values out of the box
  • Location chips pull the property_location taxonomy so each card shows the area at a glance
  • Saved views let agents share filtered boards like Top viewed or Needs photos without code

Features

What SleekView Feedback gives you for WP Property Listings

Native property_listing support

SleekView speaks the WP Property Listings schema. It maps the property_listing post type, its taxonomies, and wppl meta fields to vote, status, and category fields automatically, so a listing feedback board can go live in minutes without writing custom WP_Query loops in the theme.

Real upvotes on real properties

Each Upvote click increments a meta value on the underlying listing post. The score is queryable, exportable, and visible in WP Property Listings custom columns, which keeps the listing record as the source of truth instead of forking the data into a separate tool to manage.

Saved agent triage views

Agents get scoped saved views like Top viewed this week, Needs photos, or Stale pricing. Each view is a stored filter on the property_listing query, so the team can hand off triage without rebuilding the filters every morning before the weekly agent standup begins.

Audience

Three teams that turn WP Property Listings into a feedback board

Real estate agents

Agents see a ranked board of listings sorted by view count and tagged with review status. Stale entries with rising views float to the top of a Needs photos board so they get refreshed before the next open house weekend hits the calendar at all.

Public buyer feedback walls

Buyers land on a public listing feedback wall, upvote properties they want updated, and see a transparent status pill on each card so they know whether the agent has seen the request and is acting on it already today.

Agency brokers

Brokers running multiple agents on WP Property Listings scope each board per agent. Status pills surface entries that need updating, and saved view links can be shared with team leads without giving them full WordPress admin access at all.

The bigger picture

Why a property listings plugin needs feedback

Real estate listings on WP Property Listings drift the same way they drift everywhere: photos go stale, pricing shifts, feature lists get out of step with the actual property, and the gallery the agent meant to update last month sits with the same five images. WP Property Listings has the right model for managing all this, the property_listing CPT and the agent contact card, but the default admin only lets one agent at a time triage the data through a list table that nobody on the buyer side ever sees. The result is that quality signal stays trapped in the brokerage admin and gets reinvented in spreadsheets every quarter.

SleekView gives the same records a public, vote-driven home. Agents get a saved Triage board sorted by view count and review status pill. Brokers get per-agent scoping so each member of the team has their own ranked queue.

Buyers get a public feedback wall where they can flag a stale listing without filing a ticket. Nothing about WP Property Listings changes underneath, the listing record stays the source of truth, and the review loop now lives where the team and the buyers already work each day.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Feedback for WP Property Listings

No. SleekView reads the existing property_listing post type and the standard wppl taxonomies and meta keys WP Property Listings already writes, including price, beds, baths, and location. The only write is the upvote increment, which lands on a meta key you choose so it sits next to the listing data.

 

Yes. The Upvote button supports guest votes with a per-IP and per-session lock to keep counts honest. If you would rather restrict votes to logged-in users or to specific roles like Subscriber or Agent, you can flip that in the view settings without touching any code at all.

 

You map a wppl_review_status meta key when you build the view, often aligning it with the property_status taxonomy. SleekView shows a colored pill for each value, and any listing without a status simply renders without a pill rather than blocking the card from showing on the board itself.

 

Yes. SleekView reads the property_listing post records regardless of how they were created, so IDX-imported and manually-entered listings sit on the same board. Sync runs keep the records up to date, and SleekView refreshes the board on its normal cadence after each import completes.

 

Yes. Every saved view has its own role and capability scope, so you can publish a public buyer feedback wall on the listings hub and a separate Agent Triage queue that only Authors and Editors can see. Both views share the same property_listing data underneath the surface.

 

When the underlying property_listing post is deleted, SleekView removes the card on the next refresh. If the post is trashed rather than fully deleted, the card disappears from the public view but the upvote meta is preserved on the trashed post in case you restore it later.

 

Yes. Every SleekView is available as a shortcode and a Gutenberg block, so you can drop a Top viewed view onto the homepage hero, embed a Needs photos view on an internal agent wiki, or stitch several views into a single broker dashboard with separate columns side by side.

 

SleekView paginates and sorts at the database level rather than loading every property_listing post into memory, so a site with several thousand listings still renders the top of the feedback board in well under a second on a normal shared host. Aggregation queries hit indexed columns.

 

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