SleekView for All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets
SleekView reads the All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets postmeta keys joined to wp_posts and renders one row per post with schema type, key field, completeness and last edited ready to sort and filter.
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Schema lives in postmeta, the table reads the records
All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets attaches schema markup to individual posts via a meta box on the post editor. The data lives in wp_postmeta as a set of structured keys per post: schema type (Review, Recipe, Event, ItemList, SoftwareApplication, Product) and the schema-specific fields (rating, cook time, event start date, price) that drive the JSON-LD output on the front end.
The default UI shows that data inside each post editor and renders the JSON-LD when the post is requested. There is no per-post overview that answers questions like which posts have schema attached at all, which schema types are in active use across 1,200 articles, which recipe entries are missing a cook time, or which event entries describe shows that already happened and should be cleaned up. SleekView reads the same schema postmeta and turns every post with schema attached into a row in a sortable, filterable audit grid.
The plugin keeps owning the meta box, the JSON-LD generation and the front-end schema output. SleekView is a read-and-write layer on top of the same postmeta, so the schema continues to render exactly as the plugin emits it.
Workflow
How SleekView surfaces All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets data
Point at the schema postmeta
Compose the columns
Filter and sort like a database
Save and gate the view
Sample columns
A typical schema coverage audit view
wp_319_posts + wp_319_postmeta (All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets keys)
| Title | Schema type | Key field | Status | Post type | Last modified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30-minute risotto | Recipe | cookTime: PT30M | complete | post | 2026-05-12 |
| Riverside jazz festival 2024 | Event | startDate: 2024-07-12 | expired | post | 2024-08-02 |
| Sourdough starter guide | Recipe | cookTime: — | missing cookTime | post | 2025-11-18 |
| Best noise-cancelling headphones 2026 | Review | ratingValue: 4.6 | complete | post | 2026-04-30 |
| Open studio weekend | Event | startDate: 2026-06-12 | upcoming | post | 2026-05-08 |
Comparison
Default schema plugin admin vs SleekView
Default schema plugin admin
- Schema fields live in the post editor meta box, one record at a time
- No per-post list of schema type and key field as sortable rows
- No filter for event entries with a past start date
- Bulk editor does not cover the schema postmeta keys
- No saved views per role for SEO leads, content strategists or editors
SleekView
- Every post with schema rendered as a row with type, key field and status columns
- Filter to expired events or recipes missing a cook time in one click
- Inline edits to schema fields write back through the same postmeta keys
- Saved views per role: SEO lead, content strategist, editor
- Same dataset the chart view reads, so table and dashboard stay in sync
Features
What SleekView gives you for All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets
Schema postmeta as real columns
Title, schema type, key field, status and last-modified rendered directly from the All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets postmeta keys joined to wp_posts.
Real sort, filter and inline edit
Sort by schema type, filter to expired events or missing required fields, and inline-edit the relevant postmeta cells without opening every post.
Role-scoped saved views
Save views per role and embed them on frontend pages so editors see only the section slice the admin allows.
Audience
Who uses SleekView for All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets
SEO leads
Pin a saved view scoped to posts with schema and confirm structured data is keeping up with content velocity instead of falling behind on long-tail posts.
Event-driven sites
Filter to Event schema with a past date and bulk-clean expired event markup before Search Console flags the site for outdated structured data.
Content editors
Filter the missing-fields view to their own section and ship the schema fixes inline ahead of the next audit, without waiting for the SEO lead to surface the cleanup list.
The bigger picture
Schema is records, not invisible postmeta
All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets does an honest job: a clean meta box per post, JSON-LD output on the front end and a minimal admin surface. The trade-off is that schema becomes invisible the moment a post is published. No screen tells the SEO lead how many posts have schema attached, which types are in active use across 1,200 articles, how many recipe entries lack a cook time or how many event entries describe shows that already happened.
SleekView treats the schema postmeta as the structured records it already is. Posts become rows with schema type, key field, status and last-modified columns, sortable and filterable, with inline edits flowing through the same postmeta keys the plugin writes. The plugin keeps owning the JSON-LD generation; SleekView adds the audit surface a meta box on its own cannot offer.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView for All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets
No. The plugin still owns the meta box, the JSON-LD generation and the schema output. SleekView reads the same schema postmeta as a sortable table and inline edits write back through the same postmeta keys, so the JSON-LD on the front end refreshes exactly as it would after editing through the plugin's own meta box.
 Yes. All In One Schema.org Rich Snippets is free, and the postmeta keys it writes are the same regardless of version. SleekView reads those keys directly, so the table works on every install of the plugin.
 Yes. Event schema entries carry a startDate in postmeta. Filter the table to Event schema with a date in the past and the resulting list is the cleanup queue. Editors can bulk-delete or bulk-update from the grid.
 Yes. Join the schema postmeta to wp_posts and add a post_type filter on the underlying table. A view can be scoped to posts only, products only or any custom post type, which is useful for ecommerce sites separating product reviews from editorial reviews.
 SleekView uses Schema.org guidance per type (rating for Review, cookTime for Recipe, startDate for Event, price for Product). Each saved view defines its own missing-field rule, which can be tightened if Search Console flags a specific subset.
 Yes. Click the key-field cell to update the value and SleekView writes back to the same postmeta key the plugin reads on the front end. The JSON-LD reflects the change with no additional step.
 No. Queries hit indexed postmeta keys and the underlying table paginates. Sites with tens of thousands of schema entries stay responsive because the grid only fetches the visible page.
 Yes. Any saved view exports to CSV with the current filters and columns applied. Editorial leads typically export the expired-events list or the missing-cookTime list as a monthly cleanup brief.
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