SleekView Charts for Elementor Popups
Elementor stores popups as elementor_library posts with triggers, conditions, and counters in postmeta. SleekView Charts reads those keys and renders impressions, conversions, and CTR as Number, Donut, Bar, and Area cards.
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Popup performance, charted across every template
Elementor Popups are stored as elementor_library posts with a _elementor_template_type meta of popup, and their triggers, conditions, and counters live in postmeta keys on each template. The native admin lists popups by name and status; impressions, conversions, and the resulting CTR live one editor click deeper. Running a monthly performance review across fifteen popups means opening templates one by one.
SleekView Charts reads the same meta keys the table view does and renders a popup performance dashboard. A Number card for total impressions across active popups. A Donut for active vs draft mix. A Bar ranking popups by conversion rate (computed from impressions and conversions). An Area or Line of impressions over time, when the install records timestamps with the counters.
Inline edits stay on the table side: toggle status, change a trigger, update a flag, all through Elementor's meta API. The dashboard is the strategic surface; row-level changes are still a click away through the underlying SleekView table.
Workflow
Build an Elementor Popups charts dashboard
Pick the source
elementor_library with template-type meta popup, joined to postmeta for trigger type, condition target, and counters.
Pick chart cards
Save the dashboard
Drill to the popup row
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from Elementor Popups data
Total impressions (active)
Sum(impressions)
Status mix
Count
group by post_status
Conversions by popup
Sum(conversions)
group by post_title
Impressions by trigger type
Sum(impressions)
group by trigger_type
Comparison
Default Elementor Popups reporting vs SleekView Charts
Default Elementor admin
- Impressions and conversions live behind the editor, not on a dashboard
- No cross-template ranking by performance
- Trigger type isn't a chartable dimension
- Active vs draft share has no visual breakdown
- No way to embed a popup-performance dashboard for client roles
SleekView Charts
- Total impressions and conversion rates aggregated across templates
- Trigger-type Bar surfaces which family drives volume
- Active vs draft Donut catches housekeeping debt early
- Drill from any chart slice into the filtered popups table
- Capability-gated and frontend-embeddable for client status calls
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for Elementor Popups
Counters as charts
Elementor's impression and conversion counters become real Number, Bar, and Area cards. The performance question stops requiring template-by-template editor opens.
Trigger as a dimension
Trigger type pulled from postmeta becomes a chart dimension. Compare exit-intent against scroll-based triggers across all templates at once, not one template at a time.
Drill to the row
Any chart slice opens the SleekView popups table filtered to that segment. The bottom three CTR bars become the inline-pause queue without leaving the surface.
Audience
Who builds Elementor Popups charts dashboards with SleekView
Marketing review
Monthly performance review opens on the conversions Bar and the trigger-type Bar. Five minutes in, the queue of templates to pause and the queue to promote are both visible.
Site editors
Active vs draft Donut catches the housekeeping debt. Twenty old draft templates from last year's campaigns get archived in a sprint instead of cluttering search forever.
Agency client deliveries
Capability-gated client dashboard: total impressions and the conversions Bar, no editor access. Monthly status calls use the same screen the agency uses internally.
The bigger picture
Why a popup dashboard beats opening every template
Elementor's popup builder produces real conversion impact, but its admin treats each popup as an opaque template. The list shows name and status; impressions, conversions, and the resulting CTR are hidden inside the editor or scattered across post-meta keys. That works while you're designing one popup.
It does not work for a site running fifteen popups across product pages, blog content, and exit-intent capture, with monthly content reviews and quarterly performance audits. Answering "which popup family is driving impressions this month" or "what's the cross-template conversion picture" means opening templates one by one or pulling counters into a spreadsheet. SleekView Charts reads Elementor's meta and counters and renders the strategic dashboard the editor never produced.
Same Elementor runtime, dramatically less digging between knowing performance is worth reviewing and seeing the picture.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for Elementor Popups
Yes. Elementor tracks impression and conversion counts per popup in postmeta. SleekView reads those keys directly and uses them as the source for the Number, Bar, and Area cards. No parallel tracking, no new database tables.
Yes. Conversion rate is a computed column derived from impressions and conversions at query time. Add it to a Bar grouped by popup or trigger type and the chart sorts on the derived value the same way it does on a raw column.
Cards read live from postmeta on each dashboard load. New impressions and conversions reflect within minutes of the popup firing. There's no scheduled rollup or aggregation lag between Elementor recording a counter and the chart moving.
Popups are an Elementor Pro feature, so the dashboard is meaningful on Pro installs. SleekView reads the same template post type Pro creates. Free-tier installs have no popups, so the dashboard simply shows zero rows rather than breaking.
 Yes. When the counters include timestamps (or you maintain a snapshot column), filter the dashboard to last-30-days or last-90-days. For installs that only keep running totals, the dashboard reflects all-time counters with a manual reset cadence.
 
No. SleekView runs in wp-admin or a frontend embed surface, separate from Elementor's runtime. Chart queries hit indexed columns on posts and postmeta; scoping to active templates keeps queries lean on installs with hundreds of historical templates.
Yes. SleekView dashboards are gated by WordPress capability. A content role sees the popup performance dashboard without holding the edit_pages capability that opens the Elementor editor. Useful for review meetings where an accidental design change would be expensive.
No. The editor is still where popups get designed and configured. SleekView Charts is the strategic dashboard over the data Elementor already records. Inline status changes and meta edits live on the SleekView table; design and copy still belong in Elementor.
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