SleekView Charts for Commento for WordPress
SleekView Charts reads the embed configuration the Commento plugin writes into postmeta and options, and renders embed coverage, post-type split, rollout cadence and per-author adoption as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards instead of a plugin settings screen.
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Commento hosts the conversations. WordPress owns the coverage data.
Commento is a privacy-first commenting platform that embeds via a small script tag, with comment threads stored in Commento's own backend (self-hosted or managed). The WordPress plugin is responsible for inserting the embed, optionally per post type, and tracking which posts opt in. That coverage layer is what editors, migration leads and site ops actually need a picture of.
SleekView Charts reads the same plugin options and per-post meta the audit table reads and renders the dataset as chart cards. A Number card counts posts with Commento enabled. A Pie splits embed coverage across post types. A Bar groups enablement by month to verify a rollout window. An Area trends weekly enablements so editorial leads see whether new authors keep the toggle on or whether coverage is drifting down on fresh content.
The scope stays honest. SleekView does not mirror Commento's threads, votes or moderation actions, all of which live in the Commento backend and would only rot if duplicated. It charts the WordPress side of the bridge: which posts run the embed, when and where coverage is missing.
Workflow
Turn Commento embed configuration into a dashboard
Read the embed configuration
Compose the chart cards
Save and scope the dashboard
Share or export
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from Commento for WordPress data
Posts with Commento enabled
Count
Coverage by post type
Count
group by post_type
Enablement by author
Count
group by post_author
Posts enabled per week
Count
group by post_date
Comparison
Default Commento plugin screen vs SleekView Charts
Default Commento plugin screen
- Plugin screen surfaces options, not aggregate coverage of the embed
- No KPI for total posts running the Commento widget
- Cannot split coverage by post type visually
- No per-author breakdown to spot authors skipping the embed toggle
- No timeline of enablement to confirm a migration window held
SleekView Charts
- KPI card for total posts with Commento enabled
- Pie of embed coverage by post type for rollout audits
- Bar of enablement by author for adoption reviews
- Area trend of weekly enablements to spot drift in new content
- Honest scope: charts the WordPress embed footprint, not Commento threads
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for Commento for WordPress
Coverage dashboard, not a settings page
Render the embed footprint as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards so editors and ops see where the widget lives, not just option toggles.
Filters span table and chart
Filter to one post type or one author in the chart view and the audit table narrows to the same cohort. One dataset, two ways to read coverage.
Privacy posture preserved
Commento's privacy-first model keeps conversation data off WordPress. The SleekView dashboard reads only the embed configuration WordPress already stores.
Audience
Who builds Commento charts dashboards with SleekView
Migration leads
Track the rollout to Commento with a coverage KPI and a weekly enablement trend so the migration project has clean before-and-after numbers.
Editorial teams
Spot authors that consistently forget the embed toggle and follow up before readers notice missing comment sections.
Site ops
Watch the embed footprint as content scales and confirm that new post types added to the site are correctly included in the Commento rollout.
The bigger picture
Why a hosted-comments rollout still needs a WordPress-side dashboard
Commento intentionally keeps conversation data off WordPress, which is a feature for privacy-conscious teams and a constraint for teams that want one place to see how the integration is performing. The data WordPress still owns is the embed footprint: which posts run the widget, when it was enabled and which authors and post types are in scope. The shape of the dashboard matters: a KPI of enabled posts anchors rollout reviews, a coverage pie corrects assumptions about which post types are actually live, an author bar surfaces adoption gaps and a weekly area trend confirms that new content keeps the toggle on.
Same plugin options, same per-post meta, completely different posture toward the rollout. The grid renders the WordPress half of the integration as a dashboard, which is the difference between assuming Commento is everywhere and proving it.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for Commento for WordPress
No. Comment threads live in Commento's backend and stay there, in line with the platform's privacy posture. SleekView reads only the WordPress-side embed configuration: which posts have the widget enabled, when and across which post types.
 Not from WordPress. Active-user metrics live in the Commento dashboard. SleekView covers the coverage side of the integration (where the widget is live), which is the data WordPress actually owns.
 Posts without explicit meta inherit the plugin's default behavior. The dashboard buckets the explicit-enabled cohort separately from the inherited cohort so the rollout audit reflects reality rather than only toggled rows.
 Yes. The chart view and the table view share the dataset, so a filter for one post type or one author narrows both surfaces. Migration leads pivot between row-level audit and chart-level summary without rebuilding any filter.
 Yes. Group by post_date with an Area or Line card and aggregate as Count to see weekly or monthly enablement cadence. Useful for proving a migration window held and for spotting drift in newer content.
 No. SleekView reads WordPress tables directly. The plugin's communication with Commento stays untouched, which preserves the privacy posture the platform is chosen for.
 Yes. Combine a WordPress capability gate with a filter for one post_author so an author sees only their own coverage, while editorial sees the site-wide view.
 Yes. Any filtered cohort behind a chart card exports as CSV with the same columns the table view would show, including the embed flag and enablement date. Migration leads typically use the export for project closeout reports.
 Pricing
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