SleekView Charts for BlogVault
BlogVault runs backups in the cloud and mirrors recent activity locally. SleekView Charts reads that local mirror and turns it into a dashboard that lives where the rest of WordPress operations live.
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Local activity, dashboard-shaped
BlogVault is intentionally cloud-first: the heavy backup, restore, and staging work happens off-site, and the WordPress plugin keeps a small local mirror of recent activity in options and transients. The plugin admin stays minimal on purpose, which is fine for product positioning but uncomfortable for teams who live in wp-admin and want to see backup health without bouncing to a separate console.
SleekView Charts reads what BlogVault writes locally and renders it as a configurable dashboard. Number cards show successful syncs in the last 30 days, failed activity events, and the most recent backup. A donut splits activity by type: Backup completed, Restore initiated, Sync failed, Staging refreshed. Bar cards rank activity by source and actor. Area cards trace activity volume over time so a quiet stretch where nothing synced is visible at a glance.
Every card reads the local options BlogVault already maintains, so the cloud console remains the source of truth for long-term history, restores, and security features. The dashboard is the WordPress-side companion: it answers the everyday question without leaving the admin.
Workflow
From BlogVault local mirror to a charts dashboard
Connect to BlogVault local data
Switch to the Charts view
Pin the everyday dashboard
Share across the team
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from BlogVault data
Successful syncs last 30 days
Count
Activity mix
Count
group by activity
Failures by source
Count
group by source
Activity volume by day
Count
group by date
Comparison
Default BlogVault reporting vs SleekView Charts
Default BlogVault plugin admin
- Cloud dashboard requires leaving WordPress for everyday checks
- Local plugin UI is intentionally minimal
- No WordPress-side activity mix chart
- No WordPress-side trend view of sync volume
- Editors and admins need separate BlogVault accounts for visibility
SleekView Charts
- Number cards for successful syncs, failed activity, latest backup
- Donut for the local activity mix
- Horizontal bar for failures grouped by source
- Area chart for activity volume over time
- All cards filter together by activity type, status, or actor
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for BlogVault
WordPress-side visibility
Editors and admins see backup activity inside wp-admin without bouncing to a separate console. A glance at the dashboard replaces a tab switch and a credential prompt.
Failures surfaced locally
Failures and sync timeouts get their own charts in WordPress rather than waiting to be noticed during the next cloud console visit. Issues stop hiding behind the boundary between two products.
Role-aware reporting
Editors get a high-level view; ops gets the failure trail; agencies get a consistent shape across the whole client portfolio. The same dashboard answers different questions for different roles.
Audience
Who builds BlogVault charts dashboards with SleekView
WP-centric teams
Teams that live in WordPress get backup health visibility without leaving the admin. The cloud console keeps doing what it does best for deep work; the WordPress dashboard handles the everyday check.
Agencies
Roll out the same BlogVault dashboard across every client retainer. Every monthly review opens the same four cards, which scales the practice cleanly across the portfolio.
Editorial teams
Editors get visibility into backup health without needing BlogVault dashboard accounts. They see a green or red figure in the admin they already use every day.
The bigger picture
Why WordPress-side dashboards complement a cloud-first product
BlogVault's cloud-first architecture is a real strength: the plugin stays small, the backups stay off-site, and the recovery story stays resilient. That same architecture has a workflow cost. The team most likely to notice a backup issue first (editors and admins working in wp-admin) is also the team least likely to be logged into the BlogVault dashboard at the moment something happens.
The result is a small but real lag between when an issue is visible in the cloud and when it is visible to the people doing the daily work. SleekView Charts closes that gap by reading the same activity BlogVault already mirrors locally and rendering it as a dashboard inside wp-admin. The cloud console keeps doing what it does best: long-term history, restores, advanced controls.
The Charts view keeps WordPress aware of what BlogVault is doing, which is usually enough to catch issues before they propagate into the editorial day. Two surfaces beat one when the work actually happens in WordPress.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for BlogVault
No. The cloud console remains the source of truth for long-term backup history, restores, staging, and security features. SleekView Charts renders the WordPress-side mirror, which is the slice most useful for daily operations.
 No. Backup, restore, and migration actions remain in BlogVault for safety, because they are operations BlogVault performs from the cloud side. The Charts view focuses on visibility for the team working in wp-admin.
 No. The dashboard reads only what BlogVault stores locally and respects WordPress capability checks. Sensitive options like API tokens can be marked hidden in the column configuration so they never appear in any view.
 Yes. Per-site scope is respected. On multisite each site's BlogVault state has its own dashboard, or a network-level view can roll up activity across blogs when the operations team monitors the whole network rather than individual sites.
 Yes. The local options and activity records BlogVault writes are present across plans, so the Charts view applies whether the install runs the basic backup plan or the higher-tier security and staging package.
 Negligible. Reads happen on demand against options-style data which is already cached by WordPress's options cache. There is no background polling, no scheduled job, and no impact on the BlogVault sync itself.
 As fresh as BlogVault writes it locally. The plugin updates its local activity record each time it syncs with the cloud, and SleekView Charts reads that mirror, so a backup that completed five minutes ago appears as soon as BlogVault updates the local trail.
 Yes. Each card supports CSV export of its underlying aggregation. Export the activity donut for a retainer review or the failures-by-source bar for a triage conversation with BlogVault support.
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