✨ 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 Charts for Image Optimizer by Hostinger dashboards

Image Optimizer by Hostinger records per-attachment status, original and compressed bytes, compression level, and WebP and AVIF flags in postmeta. SleekView Charts turns that data into a reporting dashboard for performance leads, agencies, and editorial teams.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView Charts dashboard for Image Optimizer by Hostinger

A savings dashboard built from Hostinger optimizer postmeta

Image Optimizer by Hostinger writes optimization data on each attachment in postmeta keys covering status, original size, optimized size, compression level (lossless or lossy), and any WebP or AVIF derivative flags. The Bulk Optimization page shows the running total and the per-image dialog answers single attachments, but the audit-shaped questions a performance team has after a few months live a layer down.

SleekView Charts reads the same postmeta and turns it into a configurable dashboard. Number cards show total bytes saved across the library. Pie cards split attachments by optimization status (optimized, queued, failed, skipped). Bar cards rank compression levels by use. Area cards trace savings by upload year so a performance lead can see which sections of the site benefit most from a focused round.

Every card reads through the postmeta the optimizer already writes, so the bulk queue, the backup of originals, and the restore action remain authoritative. The dashboard is an admin companion that answers the cross-cutting questions the per-attachment dialog never could, scoped by MIME type, year, or status with a single filter.

Workflow

From Hostinger optimizer postmeta to a dashboard

1

Connect to attachments and postmeta

Create a SleekView against wp_posts attachments joined to Image Optimizer by Hostinger postmeta. Original bytes, optimized bytes, compression level, WebP, and AVIF are pre-mapped to chart-ready columns for the dashboard to group and aggregate against.
2

Switch to the Charts view

Add a Charts view on top of the same dataset. Each card picks a chart type, a group-by column, an aggregation, and an optional value column. No SQL, no export, no separate reporting tool sitting next to the WordPress admin.
3

Pin the savings dashboard

Save a default dashboard that mirrors a performance review: total saved, status mix, compression level split, and savings by upload year. Saved dashboards reopen with one click for every team member running the optimization workflow.
4

Filter across cards

Use the top-level filter bar to scope the dashboard by upload year, MIME type, or status. One click narrows every card so a performance review can move from library-wide to per-section without rebuilding anything from scratch.

Sample dashboard

Charts you can build from Hostinger optimizer data

Four cards that read the optimizer postmeta directly, with no exports and no schema changes. The dashboard the bulk progress bar only hinted at.
Number · Default

Total bytes saved

A single KPI tile summing bytes saved across optimized attachments (original_size minus optimized_size). The headline number a performance lead or agency wants before any other detail about the library.
Sum(bytes_saved)
Pie · Donut

Optimization status mix

Donut chart over the optimization status postmeta. Optimized, queued, failed, and skipped sit side by side so the team sees whether the library is in shape or still has a backlog to work through.
Count group by optimization_status
Bar · Default

Compression level usage

Bar chart counting attachments per compression level (lossless or lossy). The split surfaces which level is doing the most work and where a stricter lossy pass might unlock more bytes for a future round.
Count group by compression_level
Area · Gradient

Savings by upload year

Gradient area chart of bytes saved bucketed by upload year against post_date. Reveals which sections of the library benefit most from optimization and which years still hold heavy unoptimized files.
Sum(bytes_saved) group by post_date

Comparison

Default Hostinger optimizer admin vs SleekView Charts

Default optimizer admin

  • Bulk Optimization page shows progress but not a chart layout
  • Per-attachment dialog answers one image at a time
  • Compression level split and format coverage are not visualised
  • Savings by upload year requires manual CSV processing
  • Failed and queued mix is buried in the bulk action log

SleekView Charts

  • Number card for total bytes_saved across the library
  • Donut card for optimization status (optimized, queued, failed, skipped)
  • Bar card for distribution across compression levels (lossless, lossy)
  • Area card for savings by upload year against post_date
  • All cards filter together by MIME type, year, or status

Features

What SleekView Charts gives you for Image Optimizer by Hostinger

Savings as a dashboard

Replace the bulk progress bar with a dashboard that answers performance questions directly. Total saved, status mix, compression level split, and yearly trend on one screen for the whole library.

Status and format coverage

Donut cards summarize the library's posture: how much is optimized, how much is queued, how much failed. WebP and AVIF coverage drops into the same view as separate cards filtered on the conversion flags.

Plan the next round

An area chart of savings by upload year shows which sections of the site benefit most from a focused optimization round. Performance leads see exactly where the next bulk pass should go for the biggest wins.

Audience

Who builds Hostinger optimizer dashboards with SleekView

Performance leads

Open the dashboard before a Core Web Vitals push. Total saved, status mix, and compression level distribution replace a sticky-note running list of attachments that still need a retry.

Agencies on retainer

Hand a client a quarterly savings dashboard scoped to their library. Total saved, the level breakdown, and the yearly trend make the retainer report write itself instead of being a one-off export.

Site editors after migrations

Read the failed and queued slices of the status donut to see what landed unoptimized after a recent import. Plan the cleanup pass before the next homepage refresh goes out.

The bigger picture

Why image optimization data needs a chart surface

Image optimization is a long tail. The first bulk run handles the existing library, but every new upload, every failed retry, every newly enabled format, and every theme change adds rows that drift away from optimal. Image Optimizer by Hostinger records all of it on the attachment in postmeta the WordPress media library does not surface as columns, and the bulk dashboard answers only the broad-strokes question of how much has been saved overall.

The audit-shaped questions a performance team has after a few months of operation, which year of uploads has the heaviest tail, which compression level is doing the most work, what share of the library is still queued, live a layer down. SleekView Charts reads the same postmeta and gives those answers as a dashboard. The plugin keeps doing the optimization work; performance leads, agencies, and editorial teams finally have the dashboard that turns guesses into precise numbers in a few seconds.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Charts for Image Optimizer by Hostinger

No. SleekView Charts is an admin reporting surface that reads the same postmeta Image Optimizer by Hostinger already writes. Optimization, the backup of originals, the restore action, and the bulk queue continue to be the optimizer's job. The dashboard is purely a reading layer.

 

Yes. Add Number or Pie cards filtered on the WebP and AVIF conversion postmeta flags. The result is a coverage view that surfaces gaps after enabling AVIF on an existing library that was originally optimized to WebP only or to the base format.

 

Yes. Both tiers write the same postmeta on each attachment, so the charts work the same regardless of plan. The dashboard makes it easier to estimate whether a higher tier is worth it by surfacing how many images still sit in the queued or unoptimized slice.

 

Yes. The dashboard has a top-level filter bar that applies across all cards. Picking a MIME type narrows every card on the screen so a JPEG-only or PNG-only audit is one filter away from the library-wide view of total savings and status mix.

 

Yes. When the optimizer restores an original, the postmeta is updated to reflect the restored state, so the dashboard shows that attachment back in the unoptimized slice. The savings totals adjust automatically without any manual recalculation step.

 

No. Charts are computed against the postmeta indexes WordPress already maintains, with SleekView caching aggregation results between renders. The first paint may take a moment on very large libraries, subsequent loads are immediate even with hundreds of thousands of attachments.

 

Yes. Each card supports a CSV export of its underlying aggregation. Export the compression level distribution for an internal performance memo, or export the yearly savings trend for a quarterly client report. The export contains the same rows the chart counts.

 

Yes. SleekView Charts never touches the backup files directly. Restore actions on a row in the table view call the optimizer's own restore function. The audit trail, backup folder, and original file storage remain authoritative throughout.

 

Pricing

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