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✨ 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 Amplitude Analytics

SleekView Charts reads the Amplitude WordPress plugin's API key, tracked-event toggles, and user-property mappings directly. Coverage by post type, hook source, and configuration changes render as Number, Pie, Bar, and Area cards inside WP Admin.

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SleekView Charts dashboard for Amplitude Analytics

An Amplitude API key in a settings field is not a tracking plan

The Amplitude WordPress plugin stores an API key and a set of toggles for which WordPress events to forward: post published, user registered, login, comment posted, WooCommerce order, and similar hooks. The settings screen tells you the plugin is connected. It does not tell you how many events are configured to fire, which post types they cover, or whether a recent plugin update silently turned an event off.

SleekView Charts reads the same plugin options and joins them with the WordPress posts and users tables. A Number card counts active tracked events. A Pie shows the split between enabled, disabled, and unconfigured event slots. A Bar groups tracked events by post type or hook source. An Area trends configuration changes against the option revision history.

Because the data sits in standard WordPress tables, filters carry between the table view and the chart view on one shared dataset. The Amplitude project keeps receiving events exactly as before, on the same hooks, with no extra front-end script.

Workflow

Turn Amplitude plugin settings into a coverage dashboard

1

Read the plugin options

SleekView detects the Amplitude WordPress plugin and registers the API key option, tracked-event toggles, and user-property mappings as queryable sources, no manual schema mapping required.
2

Compose the chart cards

Pick Number, Pie, Bar, Area, or Line cards. Group by event_name, hook_source, post_type, or option revision date, and aggregate with Count, Sum, Average, Minimum, or Maximum.
3

Save and scope the dashboard

Name the dashboard ("Amplitude tracking plan", "Login and signup events audit") and gate it by WordPress capability so analytics leads, product managers, and engineers each see the right slice.
4

Share or export

Send a stakeholder a read-only URL or export the underlying filtered set to CSV. Sprint reviews and tracking-plan QA land with a real coverage number rather than a screenshot of a settings tab.

Sample dashboard

Charts you can build from Amplitude Analytics data

Each card below reads from the Amplitude WordPress plugin options and the standard WordPress posts table. Mix them for a tracking-plan QA dashboard, a product-analytics coverage cockpit, or an engineer-facing config trend.
Number · Default

Active tracked events

Total events currently enabled in the Amplitude plugin configuration. The anchor metric for any tracking-plan review or sprint QA.
Count
Pie · Donut text

Event status split

Plugin event slots grouped by enabled, disabled, and unconfigured. Surfaces which parts of the tracking plan are live versus dormant.
Count group by event_status
Bar · Horizontal

Tracked events per post type

Active events grouped by the post_type they fire on. Confirms whether the funnel under audit is being tracked end to end before Amplitude charts get drawn.
Count group by post_type
Area · Gradient

Configuration changes over time

Time series of edits to the Amplitude plugin options. Reveals when the API key or event toggles were changed, which is the first thing to check when an event stops arriving in Amplitude.
Count group by option_modified

Comparison

Default Amplitude plugin settings vs SleekView Charts

Default Amplitude plugin settings

  • Settings screen confirms the API key is set but does not count active events
  • No visual split of events by enabled, disabled, or unconfigured status
  • No view of which post types and hooks the tracker actually fires on
  • Configuration changes are invisible without an external audit log
  • No way to share a read-only tracking-plan snapshot with non-admins

SleekView Charts

  • KPI card for active tracked events across the install
  • Pie split across enabled, disabled, and unconfigured event slots
  • Bar of tracked events per post type for funnel coverage review
  • Area trend of plugin option revisions to catch silent key swaps
  • Same dataset behind table and chart views with shared filters

Features

What SleekView Charts gives you for Amplitude Analytics

Tracking plan as a dashboard

Render the Amplitude install as Number, Pie, Bar, and Area cards. Product and analytics leads see real event coverage, not just an API key in a settings field.

Filters span table and chart

Filter to one event name or one post type, and both the chart cards and the audit table stay in sync on the same plugin options and WordPress hooks.

Share a read-only snapshot

Send a product manager a URL of the Amplitude tracking-plan dashboard, or export the filtered set to CSV alongside the funnel and retention reports from Amplitude itself.

Audience

Who builds Amplitude charts dashboards with SleekView

Product analytics teams

Confirm that every event in the tracking plan is enabled and firing on the right post types before drawing funnel or retention conclusions in Amplitude.

Implementation engineers

Trace a sudden drop in an Amplitude event back to the plugin option that changed, using the configuration trend and the shared audit table view.

Growth agencies

Ship a quarterly client report showing Amplitude event coverage by post type and any plugin settings changes since the last review, exported straight from the dashboard.

The bigger picture

Why Amplitude implementations need a coverage dashboard, not just an API key field

Amplitude is built on the assumption that the events arriving in it match the tracking plan on the source. WordPress installs make that assumption fragile. A plugin update silently disables a default event.

A staging copy keeps the dev API key in production for a day. A custom post type rename leaves the event firing on a slug that no longer exists. The Amplitude plugin settings screen shows configuration, not coverage, so none of those drifts surface until a product manager notices a funnel step has fallen off a chart.

SleekView Charts turns the same plugin options into a small dashboard: an active-events KPI, a status pie, a bar per post type, and a trend of configuration changes. Same options, same WordPress hooks, but a governance surface engineers and PMs can actually point a tracking-plan review at.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Charts for Amplitude Analytics

It reads the Amplitude WordPress plugin's options (API key, event toggles, user-property mappings), the wp_posts table for post_type and post_status, and the option revision history. No Amplitude service-side API token is required for the dashboard itself.

 

No. SleekView Charts reports on what the WordPress plugin is doing locally: which events are enabled, which hooks they fire on, and how the configuration has changed over time. Funnel, retention, and cohort analysis stay in Amplitude, where they belong.

 

Yes. The table view and chart view share the same dataset, so a filter for one event name, one hook source, or one post type applies to both. Engineers and PMs pivot between row-level inspection and chart summaries without rebuilding the filter.

 

Yes. Group by the option-modified timestamp with an Area or Line card and a Count aggregation to see when the Amplitude plugin options were edited. Useful for tying a missing event in Amplitude back to a real WordPress configuration change.

 

Yes when the Amplitude plugin's WooCommerce integration is active. Hooks for purchase, add to cart, and checkout become event slots in the plugin options, and SleekView Charts reads them the same way it reads the core WordPress event toggles.

 

No. SleekView Charts reads existing options and posts and never writes to the Amplitude plugin's settings. The plugin keeps forwarding events on the same hooks, with no change to sampling, identity, or session handling.

 

Yes. Each subsite stores its own Amplitude API key and event mappings in its own options table, and SleekView respects that boundary. A network admin can build per-subsite dashboards or a network-level view scoped to specific blog IDs.

 

Yes. Any filtered set behind a chart card exports as CSV with the same columns the table view would show. Engineering and product teams use this to attach a tracking-plan audit to a sprint review or release checklist.

 

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