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✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount

SleekView Charts for Eventbrite Integration

Eventbrite hosts the canonical events; WordPress integrations cache them locally. SleekView Charts reads the cached records and renders them as a dashboard with cached event counts, status mix, venue load, and sold-count trends.

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SleekView Charts dashboard for Eventbrite Integration

Cached events as a dashboard

Eventbrite is the system of record for events, attendees, and ticket sales. WordPress integrations are read-mostly clients that cache events locally as a custom post type, transients, or JSON in wp_options. The local snapshot is enough for retrospective analysis and operational checks, but the default admin gives no overview of what was cached.

Charts reads whatever the integration caches and aggregates it into number, pie, bar, and area cards. Total cached events, status distribution, events per venue, and sold counts over time become a dashboard inside WP Admin so the operational glance does not require a tab switch to the Eventbrite dashboard.

The framing matters: this is a snapshot view, not a real-time replacement. Ticket sales and check-ins continue to live on Eventbrite. The dashboard reads the cache the integration plugin maintains, and the last-synced timestamp is surfaced on the dashboard so the team knows how stale the picture is before making a decision.

Workflow

From cached snapshot to a real dashboard

1

Locate the cache

Use the SleekView agent UI to find where the integration stores events. It checks custom post types, then transients, then options blobs as a fallback.
2

Confirm the schema

Map the cached fields (event ID, organization, date, venue, sold count, capacity, status) to the dataset so cards can aggregate without manual transforms.
3

Build the cards

Number for cached events, Donut for status, Bar for events per venue, and Area for sold counts over time.
4

Surface the sync timestamp

Pin the last-synced field on the dashboard so the team reads the snapshot's freshness before relying on it for an operational decision.

Sample dashboard

Charts you can build from cached Eventbrite data

Four cards from the local cache that turn a read-only snapshot into a usable operational dashboard.
Number · Default

Total cached events

Count of events present in the local cache, the headline KPI for how much of the Eventbrite portfolio is locally available.
Count
Pie · Donut

Events by status

Distribution of live, draft, and ended events from the cached snapshot, useful for spotting stale records before they confuse public listings.
Count group by status
Bar · Default

Events per venue

Per-venue counts from the cached records, useful for cross-portfolio reporting when the integration caches events from multiple organizations.
Count group by venue
Area · Gradient

Sold count over time

Sold-ticket totals plotted by event start date, drawn from the cached sold count if the integration includes it.
Sum(sold) group by start

Comparison

Eventbrite dashboard vs SleekView Charts (local snapshot)

Eventbrite dashboard

  • Eventbrite dashboard lives at a separate URL with its own login
  • Cached events have no aggregate view in the integration plugin
  • Multi-organization portfolios require switching logins per org
  • Stale or draft cached records are not surfaced anywhere
  • Quick operational questions need a tab switch every time

SleekView Charts

  • Cached event KPI inside WP Admin
  • Status pie surfaces stale or ended cached records
  • Per-venue bar across all cached organizations
  • Sold count area when the integration caches it
  • Last-synced timestamp visible on the dashboard

Features

What SleekView Charts gives you for Eventbrite Integration

Honest about the source

The dashboard reads the locally cached snapshot, with sales and check-ins remaining on Eventbrite. The card layout and copy reflect that the data is a snapshot, not real time.

Local aggregation

Once cached, aggregation runs against the local database with no API calls, which means no rate limits per filter and no waiting on Eventbrite to render.

Sync freshness on the dashboard

A last-synced field is pinned to the dashboard so the team always knows whether the numbers are an hour old or a day old before acting on them.

Audience

Who builds Eventbrite charts dashboards with SleekView

Event marketers

Quick scan of cached upcoming events with venue and status breakdown. Spot which events need a promotion push without bouncing between Eventbrite and the WP campaign dashboard.

Sales ops

Read last month's cached events with sold counts and capacity for the post-event reporting. The snapshot is enough for retrospective analysis.

Multi-org operators

If the integration caches multiple Eventbrite organizations, the per-org bar surfaces cross-portfolio totals in a single screen rather than separate logins.

The bigger picture

Why a local dashboard still matters for remote events

Eventbrite is operationally rich for ticketing and discovery, but it lives behind its own login at a separate URL. Every check on event status is a context switch. The official Automattic Eventbrite plugin was closed in 2020, so most teams now rely on third-party integrations or embedded widgets, which leaves a fragmented landscape where some teams have a custom post type with synced events and others have only an embed.

The shared problem is the lack of an admin overview. Charts solves the overview problem against whatever cache the integration populates. Total cached events, status mix, per-venue counts, and sold-count trends become a dashboard inside WP Admin, and the dashboard is upfront about being a snapshot.

Sales and check-ins remain Eventbrite's job; the snapshot is exactly what an operations team needs for the question "what is the state of my portfolio right now."

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Charts for Eventbrite Integration

On Eventbrite's servers as the system of record. WordPress integrations cache events locally as a custom post type, transient, or option blob. Charts reads the local cache, not the live Eventbrite API.

 

No. The cards reflect the cached snapshot, refreshed on the integration's sync schedule. The last-synced timestamp is visible on the dashboard so the team knows the freshness. Real-time check-ins remain on Eventbrite's dashboard or app.

 

Yes when the integration caches them. If the plugin only embeds Eventbrite's widget without caching sold counts, the column does not exist locally and the card cannot render. The agent UI is upfront about which fields are available.

 

Generally no. Most integrations are one-way (Eventbrite to WP) and edits made through SleekView stay in the local cache until the next sync overwrites them. If the integration exposes a write-back API, wiring it into SleekView's update flow is possible but not the default.

 

If you want events to live in WordPress and own the data, yes. Eventbrite makes sense when you specifically want Eventbrite's ticketing and discovery network. Many teams run both and pair the two SleekView views to cover the full event portfolio.

 

No. That plugin was closed in 2020 and is no longer on WordPress.org. Most teams now rely on third-party integrations or embed Eventbrite's widgets directly. Charts works with whichever you use as long as the integration caches data locally.

 

Yes when the integration caches the organization ID. The per-venue bar can be re-pivoted to per-organization for multi-org portfolios.

 

The cache layout changes because each plugin stores it differently. The agent UI re-discovers the new schema, and the saved dashboards are rebuilt once after the migration. Eventbrite event IDs themselves stay stable across integrations because they come from Eventbrite.

 

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