SleekView Charts for Elementor
Read every post with _elementor_data plus the elementor_library CPT, then chart Elementor footprint, template type mix, revision activity, and stale-page risk without exporting to a spreadsheet.
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Elementor produces the metadata, charts give it a dashboard
Elementor saves layouts in postmeta under _elementor_data on the page or template they belong to, with reusable items stored as the elementor_library custom post type. The default admin lists pages and templates as ordinary posts, with no count of how many Elementor-built pages exist, how many headers versus footers versus archives are saved, or how often layouts get edited week to week.
SleekView Charts treats the same posts, postmeta, and CPT records as a chart source. A Number card pins the total count of Elementor-built pages. A Pie shows the mix of template types in elementor_library. A Bar ranks authors by pages built. An Area card tracks post_modified dates so the editorial pulse, who is building, when, becomes a curve instead of a guess.
The dashboard reads the same indexed columns the audit table reads, so charts stay fast on sites with thousands of pages and revisions. Filters from the table view (status, author, template type) apply to chart cards too, which means one saved configuration covers the housekeeping audit and the agency-facing site health report.
Workflow
How SleekView Charts reads Elementor data
Detect Elementor-built posts
wp_posts as the source, filtered to rows with _elementor_data in postmeta, plus the elementor_library CPT for templates. The column picker lists post type, status, author, template type, and modified date.
Add chart cards
Filter once, apply everywhere
post_modified, or scope to a specific template type or author. Every chart card on the view respects the same filter so the dashboard always reflects the slice under review.
Save and share
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from Elementor data
Total Elementor pages
Count
Template types in library
Count
group by template_type
Pages by author
Count
group by post_author
Edits per week
Count
group by post_modified
Comparison
Default Elementor reporting vs SleekView Charts
Default Elementor admin
- No built-in chart view, only paginated page and template lists
- Total count of Elementor-built pages requires a manual scroll or SQL
- Template type mix in the library is not summarised anywhere
- No time-series view of edits per week or per month
- Author workload and ownership are invisible from the list view
SleekView Charts
- Number cards for total Elementor pages and total templates
- Pie or Donut cards for template type mix and status distribution
- Bar cards ranking authors or template types by count
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Area or Line cards plotting edits per week from
post_modified - Same filters as the audit table (type, author, status) apply to every card
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for Elementor
Real columns drive real charts
Charts pull from wp_posts, wp_postmeta, and the elementor_library CPT, so every chart card uses an actual column. No CSV exports, no spreadsheet pivots, just the live metadata Elementor already writes.
Filters carry across cards
Set a date range or scope to a template type once and every chart card on the dashboard respects it. The same configuration that drives the audit table drives the executive view.
Editorial pulse as a curve
Group by post_modified truncated to week to chart edit activity over time. Quiet weeks and campaign pushes become visible without spelunking through revisions.
Audience
Who builds Elementor charts dashboards with SleekView
Agencies
Client-facing site health dashboards with total Elementor pages, template coverage by type, and an edit-activity trend, refreshed on every visit.
Editorial teams
Pages-by-author and weekly edit volume on one screen so workload, ownership, and campaign cadence are visible without a status meeting.
Site owners
A pie of template types plus a stale-pages count surfaces housekeeping debt before it turns into a redesign-time scramble.
The bigger picture
Why Elementor sites deserve a chart view
Elementor is the most popular WordPress page builder by a wide margin, which means most sites running it have been running it for years. Years of campaign pages, abandoned drafts, A/B test variants, retired templates, and one-off landing pages pile up quietly. The metadata that describes that footprint already exists in wp_posts, wp_postmeta, and the elementor_library CPT, but the default admin only renders it as paginated lists.
Total counts, template coverage, edit cadence, author ownership, none of these are summarised anywhere. SleekView Charts reads the same tables the audit grid reads and turns each column into a chart source. A Number card answers "how many Elementor pages do we have" in one glance.
A Pie answers "do we have a header template for every section of the site". An Area card answers "is anyone still touching these layouts". The plugin keeps owning the visual editor, the chart view finally gives the surrounding metadata a home where agencies, editors, and site owners can read it.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for Elementor
Directly from wp_posts, wp_postmeta (filtered on the _elementor_data key), and the elementor_library custom post type. No export, no shadow copy. Chart cards run live queries against the same indexed columns the audit table uses, so the dashboard reflects current data as soon as Elementor writes it.
Yes. Records in elementor_library carry a template type (header, footer, single, archive, section, popup). Group a Pie or Bar card by that meta to see template coverage at a glance. Filter further to specific types when an audit focuses on, for example, every archive template across a multi-site network.
Group an Area or Line card by post_modified truncated to week or month, aggregated by Count. The curve shows when Elementor pages are being touched, useful for tracking campaign cadence, freeze windows, and stretches of zero activity that mark stale content.
Yes. View-level filters (template type, author, status, date range) apply to every chart card on the dashboard. One saved configuration drives both the audit table and the chart view, so housekeeping and reporting stay in sync.
 
Queries hit indexed columns on wp_posts (post_type, post_status, post_modified, post_author) and use the postmeta join only to detect Elementor-built rows. For very large sites, group-by columns can be backed by a lightweight cache so the dashboard renders without scanning every postmeta row on each load.
Yes. WordPress revisions are stored as posts with post_type = revision and a post_parent pointing at the live post. A second chart card grouping revisions per parent or per week makes revision pressure (which page is getting hammered with edits) visible without opening individual revision histories.
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 status pie). Inline edits in the table route through the standard WordPress update path as usual.
 Elementor does not ship a reporting screen for its own footprint, so there is nothing to replace. SleekView Charts adds a reporting surface on top of the metadata Elementor already writes, so the plugin keeps owning layout editing and the dashboard owns the summarisation.
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