SleekView for WP Task Manager
SleekView reads WP Task Manager's task post type along with its status, priority, assignee and due-date meta, then renders every open and completed task as a sortable, filterable, inline-editable table inside WordPress.
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Tasks are records, the table view is the project surface
WP Task Manager turns a WordPress install into a lightweight task tracker: tasks live as a custom post type with meta fields for status, priority, assignee and due date. The plugin's admin page lists tasks well enough for one person doing a handful of items, but the moment a team adopts it the list view stops scaling. Sorting by priority, filtering open tasks per assignee and finding everything overdue all become spreadsheet work.
SleekView reads the same task post type and meta and renders it as a real project table. Status, priority, assignee and due date become first-class columns. Sorts work the way a project lead expects: due date ascending, priority descending, assignee for a per-person grouping. Filters compose, so "open high-priority tasks for Maya due this week" is one composed view, and "every blocked task across the project" is another. Inline edit on status and priority routes through the standard WordPress save path, so plugin hooks fire exactly the way they would from the task editor.
The plugin keeps owning task creation, the workflow and the notifications. The table view adds the team-scale surface the list view was never built to be.
Workflow
How SleekView surfaces WP Task Manager data
Point at the task post type
wp_posts joined with wp_postmeta so status, priority, assignee and due-date meta become first-class fields.
Pivot meta into columns
_wptm_status, _wptm_priority, _wptm_assignee and _wptm_due_date (or the plugin's equivalents) into named columns. Filters, sorts and inline edits all run against those columns.
Compose the columns
Save and gate per-role views
Sample columns
A typical WP Task Manager project view
wp_posts
| Title | Status | Priority | Assignee | Due date | Modified |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Migrate billing flow to v2 | In progress | High | Maya Chen | 2026-05-22 | 2026-05-15 |
| Audit onboarding emails | In progress | Medium | Daniel Ruiz | 2026-05-20 | 2026-05-14 |
| Rewrite legal copy | Blocked | High | Priya Shah | 2026-05-08 | 2026-05-10 |
| Plan summer campaign | Open | Low | Maya Chen | 2026-06-12 | 2026-05-12 |
| Ship pricing page tweaks | Done | Medium | Daniel Ruiz | 2026-05-05 | 2026-05-06 |
Comparison
Default WP Task Manager admin vs SleekView
Default WP Task Manager admin
- Default screen is a list of tasks, not a column-perfect project table
-
Sorting by priority or due date requires custom
manage_posts_columnscode - Per-assignee scoping needs a separate saved search
- No first-class filter for overdue tasks (due before today and not Done)
- Composing status, priority and assignee filters together is not supported
SleekView
- Status, priority, assignee and due date as first-class columns
- Sort by Due date ascending to surface overdue work first
- Inline edit on status and priority through the standard save path
- Saved views per role: project lead, manager, individual contributor
- Same dataset feeds the project table and the chart dashboard
Features
What SleekView gives you for WP Task Manager
Task meta as real columns
Status, priority, assignee and due date become first-class table columns. The project behaves like a database table because that is what it has always been.
Inline edit routes through WordPress
Change status, priority or assignee inline and the update goes through the standard WP save path, so WP Task Manager hooks fire exactly the way they would from the task editor.
Overdue triage as a saved view
Filter to Due date before today and Status not Done, sort by Due date ascending, save the view. The team gets a permanent triage queue for missed deadlines.
Audience
Who uses SleekView for WP Task Manager
Project leads
Pin a saved "this sprint" view sorted by Due date ascending with Priority highlighted. Weekly reviews open on a real table instead of a screen-share of the list.
Team managers
Group by Assignee and scope to high-priority open tasks. Reassignment conversations start with bar height, not vibes.
Individual contributors
Filter to a single Assignee and sort by Due date for a personal queue. "What is on my plate this week" becomes a saved view, not a memory exercise.
The bigger picture
Why task lists need a real table at team scale
A task plugin scales perfectly for one person and quietly stops scaling for three. WP Task Manager keeps the data clean: every task has a status, a priority, an assignee and a due date, and the post-type plus meta combination is a faithful representation of a project. What it does not do is render that data as the column-perfect surface a team needs once the count climbs above ten or twenty.
SleekView adds that surface without changing how the plugin works. Sorts and filters compose, inline edit routes through the normal save path, and the team finally has the cockpit the data has always been waiting for.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView for WP Task Manager
No. SleekView reads the task post type and its meta. The plugin continues to own task creation, status transitions, notifications and assignments; SleekView adds a composable project table on top of the same records.
 Yes. The assignee meta is a first-class filter, so the table can scope to a single person or to a team. Combine with a Status filter to see only open work for that assignee.
 Yes. Filter to Due date before today and Status not Done, and the table narrows to overdue work only. Save that as a view and pin it on the project lead's dashboard.
 Inline edits in SleekView route through the standard WordPress update path. WP Task Manager's hooks listen to that path, so changing status or priority inline fires the same actions as saving in the task editor.
 
Queries hit indexed columns on wp_posts (post_type, post_status, post_modified) and the indexed meta_key on wp_postmeta. Filters compose into a single SQL query, so projects with thousands of tasks render fast.
Yes if the project is represented as a taxonomy term or a meta field. Add a filter for project and the table narrows to that single project across all the other columns.
 Yes. Any filtered view exports to CSV with the columns the table shows. Sprint retrospectives and weekly project reviews get a real spreadsheet of tasks with their statuses and assignees attached.
 No. The plugin still owns the task editor, the workflow and the notifications. SleekView adds a composable project table on top of the same data.
 Pricing
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SleekAI
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SleekMotion
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