SleekView Charts for Drift
Drift moved into Salesloft and the official WP plugin closed in 2022, but its widget snippet still loads on countless sites. SleekView Charts inventories every install as a chart so migration teams have an evidence base.
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Inventory orphan Drift installs visually
Drift's WordPress plugin was pulled from the directory in 2022 for guideline violations, yet the JavaScript snippet keeps shipping out from header injectors, code-snippet plugins, and abandoned theme files. The widget ID and per-page flags it leaves behind in wp_options are the only WP-side breadcrumbs left. On a multisite network running across thirty client sites, those breadcrumbs accumulate into an install-archaeology project nobody has budget for.
SleekView Charts inventories the snippets as a dashboard. A number card counts blogs with a Drift snippet still active. A donut splits installs by source plugin (Code Snippets, Insert Headers, WPCode, closed Drift plugin, theme file). A bar of widget IDs surfaces which IDs are still in heavy use vs which are one-off legacy installs. An area chart of last-edit cadence reveals installs that haven't been touched in over a year and are prime candidates for cleanup.
The honest scope: theme-file-injected snippets aren't in the database and don't chart. SleekView surfaces only what WordPress can see. For migration planning, the install-audit dashboard becomes the punch list: every blog with an active snippet, grouped by source plugin and widget ID, with the last-edit signal that tells planners which installs are dormant.
Workflow
From orphan snippets to a migration dashboard
Scan option keys
Identify source plugin
Build the audit dashboard
Export as a punch list
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from Drift install data
Active installs
Count
Source-plugin mix
Count
group by source
Widget-ID frequency
Count
group by drift_id
Last-edit cadence
Count
group by last_edit
Comparison
No-plugin status vs SleekView Charts
Direct DB checks
- The official Drift plugin was closed, no admin UI exists
- Snippets via header-injection plugins live in different option keys
- Widget-ID frequency isn't summarized anywhere
- Source-plugin distribution requires opening each blog
- Theme-file-injected snippets stay invisible from the database
SleekView Charts
- KPI for active installs across the network
- Donut for source-plugin distribution
- Bar for widget-ID frequency
- Area chart for last-edit cadence
- Export as the migration punch list
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for Drift
Active-install KPI
Live count of blogs with a Drift snippet still loading. The migration team's first number, replacing a manual audit across the network.
Source-plugin donut
Installs grouped by which plugin or option key holds the snippet. Tells the migration team which plugin to edit on which blog before they start touching code.
Network punch list
Filtered chart data exports to CSV. The migration team works through the list, swapping Drift for Salesloft Drift, Intercom, or HubSpot blog by blog.
Audience
Who builds Drift charts dashboards with SleekView
Migration planners
Inventory every Drift install before swapping vendors. Source-plugin donut and widget-ID bar produce the punch list for migration execution.
Support ops
Spot retired widget IDs still loading. The widget-ID bar's tail (IDs with one or two installs) is usually where retired workspaces hide.
Agencies
Audit inherited client sites for shadow Drift snippets the previous agency never removed. The closed-plugin wedge of the source donut surfaces them immediately.
The bigger picture
Why orphan snippets need a chart, not folklore
When a vendor closes their plugin or rebrands, the snippet they injected does not vanish. Drift's plugin sat closed for years while the JavaScript widget continued shipping out from Code Snippets entries, theme overrides, and header-injection plugins. The site keeps loading the script, the script keeps trying to call a workspace that may no longer exist, and the only WP-side trace is a widget ID buried in an option array.
Without a chart, the install footprint becomes folklore: somebody remembers that one blog runs Drift, somebody else thinks shop got migrated last year, the network admin guesses there are about fifteen installs left. The actual number is usually larger and the configuration is usually inconsistent. SleekView Charts treats those orphan snippets as data and produces a dashboard.
Active installs count, source-plugin mix, widget-ID frequency, last-edit cadence. The folklore becomes evidence. The migration becomes a punch list.
The cleanup that would otherwise be a quarter-long archaeology project becomes a structured operation with a chart that says when it's done.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for Drift
No. Conversations always lived in Drift's cloud, now Salesloft's. SleekView Charts reads only WordPress-side install state. The chart dataset covers widget ID, source plugin, target pages, and last-edit timestamp.
 Drift loads as a JS snippet, and most sites today inject it through a code-snippet plugin or directly in theme files. SleekView searches the option keys those plugins use and matches the Drift loader pattern. Closed-plugin installs still in wp_options get flagged separately.
 Not from the database. header.php snippets aren't in wp_options, so SleekView lists them as unknown source rather than inventing a row. Move the snippet to a code-snippet plugin and SleekView picks it up. Honest reporting beats fake inventory.
 SleekView Charts matches both legacy drift-XXXX patterns and the current Salesloft loader signatures. As Salesloft updates the snippet, the matcher updates alongside, so the same dashboard keeps catching old and new installs.
 Yes. SleekView can call the public Drift config endpoint per ID and flag the ones that no longer return a workspace. The retired-ID flag becomes a chart filter, turning the inventory into a triage list.
 Yes. SleekView aggregates per-blog options into a network-wide chart so agencies can produce one cross-site Drift inventory. Per-blog filters and roll-ups are both one-click.
 Yes. Each chart card exposes its data for CSV export. Filter to active installs, group by source plugin, export. The CSV becomes the migration team's punch list, one row per cleanup.
 Yes. The install-audit dashboard produces the WP-side evidence: which subsites load Drift, on which pages, from which source plugin. Combined with Drift's own data-processing record, that gives privacy reviews the missing WP-side half.
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