SleekView Charts for Crazy Egg
SleekView Charts reads the Crazy Egg plugin options and per-post exclusion meta directly from WordPress, then renders snippet coverage, role exclusions, and tracked post types as Number, Pie, Bar, and Area cards inside WP Admin.
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Knowing the account number is connected is not the same as knowing what it is tracking
The Crazy Egg WordPress plugin does one thing well: it injects the Crazy Egg tracking snippet on every front-end page using the account number stored in crazyegg_account_number. The settings screen confirms the snippet is enabled. It does not show how many pages are actually rendering it, which post types are excluded, or which roles are seeing the tracker stripped on login.
SleekView Charts reads the same option and joins it with the per-post and per-role exclusion meta the plugin and most teams add on top. A Number card counts pages where the snippet is live. A Pie splits posts by snippet status (live, excluded by post type, excluded by role, draft). A Bar groups live tracking pages by post type. An Area trends settings changes against the WordPress option revision history so a quiet account-number swap stops being invisible.
The dataset is the same dataset Crazy Egg's own snippet logic runs against, so filters carry over. Filter the chart view to one post type, and the underlying table of tracked URLs stays in sync. Nothing is recomputed in a separate report tool and no extra script ships to the front end.
Workflow
Turn the Crazy Egg plugin's options and exclusion meta into a dashboard
Read the plugin options
Compose the chart cards
Save and scope the dashboard
Share or export
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from Crazy Egg data
Pages with snippet live
Count
Snippet status split
Count
group by snippet_status
Tracked pages per post type
Count
group by post_type
Settings changes over time
Count
group by option_modified
Comparison
Default Crazy Egg plugin settings vs SleekView Charts
Default Crazy Egg plugin settings
- Settings screen shows the account number but no count of pages rendering it
- No visual split of posts by live, excluded, and role-filtered states
- No view of which post types the snippet actually reaches
- Configuration changes are invisible unless someone reads the activity log
- No way to share a read-only coverage snapshot with a non-admin stakeholder
SleekView Charts
- KPI card for total pages rendering the Crazy Egg snippet
- Pie split across live, excluded by post type, excluded by role, and draft
- Bar of tracked pages per post type for coverage review
- Area trend of option revisions to surface silent account-number swaps
- Same dataset behind the table view and the chart view, shared filters
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for Crazy Egg
Coverage as a dashboard
Render the Crazy Egg install as Number, Pie, Bar, and Area cards. Analytics leads see how many pages the snippet actually reaches, not just that the plugin is active.
Filters span table and chart
Filter to one post type or one excluded role, and both the chart cards and the audit table stay in sync. Same option key, same exclusion meta, two ways of reading it.
Share a read-only snapshot
Send a client a URL of the Crazy Egg coverage dashboard or export the filtered set to CSV. Tracking reviews land with a measurable number, not a vague status.
Audience
Who builds Crazy Egg charts dashboards with SleekView
CRO leads
Track heatmap coverage as a KPI, watch the pie of live versus excluded pages, and confirm the snippet is reaching every template that runs an experiment.
Agency analytics teams
Ship a monthly client report showing snippet coverage by post type and any settings changes since the last review, exported straight from the dashboard as CSV.
Privacy and compliance
Verify that admin and editor roles are correctly excluded and that page templates flagged for opt-out are not silently tracking, all from one dashboard view.
The bigger picture
Why heatmap tools need a coverage dashboard, not just an account number
The Crazy Egg WordPress plugin is small on purpose: it stores the account number, renders the snippet, and gets out of the way. That minimalism is the right product decision, and it is also the reason coverage problems on WordPress installs go undetected for months. A new post type ships without the snippet allowed.
A role-based exclusion expands and quietly strips tracking for half the editorial team. The account number gets swapped during a staging copy and never gets swapped back. None of that surfaces from the plugin's own settings screen, because the screen was never meant to be an audit.
SleekView Charts turns the same options and exclusion meta into a small dashboard: a coverage KPI, a status pie, a bar per post type, and a trend of settings changes. Same data, same WordPress hooks, but a governance surface a CRO lead or an agency can actually run a quarterly review against.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for Crazy Egg
It reads the Crazy Egg plugin's options (primarily the account number and exclusion rules), the standard wp_posts table for post_type and post_status, and any per-post or per-role exclusion meta the install has added. No Crazy Egg account API key is required and no data leaves the WordPress install for the dashboard itself.
 No. SleekView Charts reports on what the WordPress plugin is doing locally: snippet coverage, exclusion settings, and the post types the tracker is reaching. The heatmaps themselves still live in the Crazy Egg account, which is where you go to interpret them once you trust the coverage is correct.
 Yes. The table view and chart view share the same dataset, so a filter for one post type or one excluded role applies to both. Analytics leads can pivot between a row-level audit and a chart-level summary 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 Crazy Egg options were touched. Useful for matching a sudden tracking gap to an actual configuration change.
 Yes. SleekView assigns saved views per WordPress role. A client account can see a scoped coverage dashboard with no access to the Crazy Egg settings, plugin list, or any other admin surface, because role gating happens before the query runs.
 No. SleekView paginates against the existing post and option indexes and never loads more rows than the visible page. The Crazy Egg plugin keeps rendering its snippet exactly as before, on the same hooks, with no extra request added to the front end.
 Yes. Each subsite stores its own Crazy Egg account number and exclusion rules in its own options table, and SleekView respects that boundary. A network admin can build per-subsite coverage dashboards or a single network 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. Agencies typically use this to bundle the coverage report into a monthly client deliverable alongside the heatmap takeaways from Crazy Egg itself.
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