SleekView Charts for Elementor Pro
Read the elementor_library CPT (theme builder, popups, loop items) plus per-post _elementor_data meta and chart Pro template mix, display conditions, form submissions and edit activity from the same indexed columns the audit table uses.
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Elementor Pro writes the metadata, charts give it a reporting surface
Elementor Pro layers theme builder templates, popups, loop grids and dynamic tags on top of the core editor. All of those land in the elementor_library custom post type with a _elementor_template_type meta (single, archive, header, footer, popup, loop-item, search-results, error-404) plus display-condition meta on every record. Form submissions, when the Submissions feature is enabled, write to the dedicated e_submissions and e_submissions_values tables.
The default Pro admin lists these as paginated screens with title, type and date. Useful for opening one template, useless for asking how many Pro popups are live, which theme-builder slot has zero coverage, or whether forms are still being filled out this quarter. SleekView Charts reads the same posts, meta and submission tables and renders them as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards.
Filters on template type, display condition or date range apply to every card on a saved view, so one configuration drives both the audit grid and the stakeholder-facing dashboard. Pro keeps owning the editor, the chart view owns the summarisation.
Workflow
How SleekView Charts reads Elementor Pro data
Pick the Pro records
elementor_library for theme builder, popup and loop items, or wp_posts for pages with _elementor_data. Pro template types and display-condition meta appear as group-by columns.
Compose the chart cards
post_modified.
Filter once, apply everywhere
Save and gate access
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from Elementor Pro data
Live Pro templates
Count
Template type mix
Count
group by _elementor_template_type
Popups by trigger
Count
group by popup_trigger
Pro edits per week
Count
group by post_modified
Comparison
Default Elementor Pro reporting vs SleekView Charts
Default Elementor Pro admin
- Theme builder, popups and loop items render as separate paginated lists with no totals
- Display-condition coverage across single, archive, header and footer is not summarised
- Popup library does not surface a trigger-type breakdown without opening each entry
- Submission volume per form is not charted in the default Submissions screen
- Edit cadence across the Pro template library is invisible from the list view
SleekView Charts
- Number cards for live Pro templates, active popups and total submissions
- Pie or Donut cards for template type mix and display-condition splits
- Bar cards ranking popups by trigger or forms by submission count
- Area or Line cards plotting edits or submissions per week from indexed dates
- Same filters as the audit grid (type, condition, date) drive every chart card
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for Elementor Pro
Real Pro meta drives the cards
Cards read elementor_library, the _elementor_template_type meta and (when enabled) the Submissions tables. Every aggregation maps to a column Pro already writes, no exports involved.
Filters span table and chart
Scope a view to a single theme builder slot or a single popup trigger and both the audit table and the chart cards stay in sync on the same dataset.
Editorial pulse as a curve
Group post_modified by week to chart Pro edit activity over time. Quiet stretches and campaign pushes become visible without spelunking through revisions.
Audience
Who builds Elementor Pro charts dashboards with SleekView
Agencies
Client-facing site health dashboards covering theme builder coverage, popup inventory and weekly edit cadence, refreshed live on every visit.
Marketing teams
A pie of popup triggers plus an area of submissions per week gives campaign owners a measurable picture instead of a per-entry click-through.
Site owners
Coverage of theme builder slots and stale-template counts surface housekeeping debt before it turns into a redesign-time scramble.
The bigger picture
Why Elementor Pro sites deserve a chart view
Pro is what most Elementor sites graduate to once a marketing team forms around the install, which means the theme builder library, popup library and forms feature accumulate fast. The default Pro admin can answer "open this template" but cannot answer "how many active popups do we have", "do we have a single template for every custom post type" or "are forms still pulling submissions this quarter". All of that sits in elementor_library, _elementor_template_type meta and the Submissions tables already.
SleekView Charts reads those same tables and renders them as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards. The result is a Pro dashboard a marketing lead can read in fifteen seconds, while the editor stays where it has always been for design work.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for Elementor Pro
Directly from wp_posts, wp_postmeta (including the _elementor_template_type and display-condition keys) and, when the Submissions feature is enabled, the e_submissions and e_submissions_values tables. No exports, no shadow copies, every aggregation is a live query.
Yes. Group a Pie or Bar card by _elementor_template_type to see how many singles, archives, headers, footers, loop-items and search-results templates are live. Add a filter on display-condition meta to confirm that, for example, every custom post type has a single template assigned.
Group a Bar card by the popup trigger type stored in meta (page load, scroll, click, exit intent, idle) for an inventory view. Pair it with a Number card for active popups and (where you track conversions on the form side) an Area of submissions per week to show whether the popup mix is actually driving response.
 
Yes. When the Submissions feature is enabled, SleekView Charts reads the e_submissions table directly. A Bar card grouped by form ID ranks forms by volume, and an Area card grouped by submission date plots submissions per day or week.
Queries hit indexed columns on wp_posts (post_type, post_status, post_modified, post_author). Postmeta joins for Pro-specific keys (template type, display condition) use the indexed meta_key column, and group-by columns can be backed by a lightweight cache so dashboards render fast even on sites with hundreds of Pro templates.
Yes. Group an Area or Line card by post_modified truncated to week, aggregated by Count, scoped to elementor_library. The curve shows when Pro templates are being touched, useful for tracking campaign cadence, freeze windows and quiet stretches.
Charts are read-only summaries by design. To act on a chart insight, switch to the audit table filtered to the same slice (for example, the stale segment of a popup pie). Inline edits in the table route through the standard WordPress update path, so Pro's caches invalidate exactly as they would after a save in the editor.
 Pro does not ship a dedicated reporting screen for its template footprint, so there is nothing to replace. SleekView Charts adds a reporting surface on top of the metadata Pro already writes, so the plugin keeps owning the editor and the chart view owns the summarisation.
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