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

SleekView Charts for GeneratePress

GeneratePress is a renderer, but the CPTs registered through Elements, GenerateBlocks, ACF, or Meta Box still live in wp_posts and wp_postmeta. SleekView Charts pivots that data into CPT mix, publishing cadence, meta coverage, and taxonomy share on chart cards.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView Charts dashboard for GeneratePress

Charts on top of the data GeneratePress renders

GeneratePress and its Premium Elements give the front end near-complete flexibility, but the admin side is left at WordPress core defaults. The list table shows title, author, and date; everything else lives in postmeta and stays invisible until a click into the editor. For sites with hundreds of service entries, case studies, or doc posts, that asymmetry hides the inventory.

SleekView Charts reads the same CPTs and meta keys the SleekView table reads, then draws the aggregates as cards. CPT mix as a donut. Publishing cadence as an area chart. Meta-key coverage as a horizontal bar. Taxonomy share as a stacked bar. Each card respects the dashboard-level filter set, so a service catalogue can be scoped to a single tier or a doc archive to one version with one click.

Inline editing stays in the table layout where row-level operations make sense. The chart dashboard is read-only and exists to surface inventory signals: which CPT is dominant, which meta keys are sparsely populated, which months stalled on output. Once a signal points somewhere, the table is one toggle away.

Workflow

How charts plug into GeneratePress data

1

Pick the CPT and meta keys

Charts source from wp_posts joined to wp_postmeta. The picker lists CPTs on the install and the meta keys actually present, so the dashboard fits the GP Element layouts already configured.
2

Compose chart cards

Donut for CPT mix, area for posts per month, horizontal bar for meta-key coverage, single-number KPI for stale entries.
3

Filter at the dashboard level

Status, taxonomy, date range, or any meta value can scope the whole board. Every card recomputes against the same filtered source for comparability.
4

Save and reuse

Each board saves as a named view with capability gating. Editorial leads, account managers, and operations open the cards relevant to their workflow.

Sample dashboard

Charts you can build from GeneratePress data

Four representative cards from a service-catalogue site on GeneratePress: CPT mix, publishing cadence, meta-coverage gaps, and taxonomy share.
Pie · Donut

Posts by CPT

Donut of posts grouped by CPT (service, testimonial, case study, doc). Inventory composition is visible without scrolling through six admin submenus.
Count group by post_type
Area · Gradient

Posts published per month

Area chart of new entries per month. Output cadence is clear, including months where the content engine stalled across all CPTs.
Count group by post_date
Bar · Stacked

Services by tier

Stacked bar of service posts by tier (Premium, Standard, Starter) over time. Mix shifts in the catalogue become a visible trend instead of an anecdote.
Count group by service_tier
Number · Default

Posts missing key meta

Single-number KPI counting posts where a critical meta key is empty. Editorial backlog becomes one figure to drive down instead of a tab-by-tab audit.
Count

Comparison

Default WP admin list vs SleekView Charts on GeneratePress

Default WP admin list

  • List shows title, author, and date with no chart layer
  • CPT mix only visible by checking each post-type submenu count
  • Meta-key coverage requires custom SQL to count
  • Taxonomy share has no built-in chart
  • Publishing cadence not exposed at the dashboard level

SleekView Charts

  • Donut of posts by CPT in seconds
  • Area chart of publishing cadence per month
  • Stacked bar of taxonomy or tier share over time
  • Number KPI for posts missing critical meta
  • Same source as the SleekView GeneratePress table

Features

What SleekView Charts gives you for GeneratePress

Inventory composition

A donut of posts by CPT exposes whether the service catalogue, case-study library, or doc archive is the bulk of the content estate. Reorg planning starts from a real share figure.

Publishing cadence

An area chart of posts published per month makes output velocity legible. Months that fell off the rhythm become visible signals for editorial planning.

Meta coverage KPI

One number card counting posts where a critical meta key is empty. Editorial backlog is no longer invisible; it becomes a number the team commits to reducing.

Audience

Who builds GeneratePress charts dashboards with SleekView

Agencies and freelancers

GP Premium Elements render the catalogue; SleekView Charts gives the admin the same level of polish. Mix and cadence cards turn portfolio audits into a one-glance routine.

Documentation sites

Doc CPT velocity and stale-content KPIs sit on one screen. Technical writers prioritise updates from the chart instead of scrolling the post list.

Service businesses

Service tier mix over time as a stacked bar reveals when the catalogue drifts upmarket. Pricing and packaging conversations start from the chart.

The bigger picture

Why GeneratePress sites need a chart dashboard layer

GeneratePress and its Premium hooks make the front end of a site look as sharp as the editorial team wants. The admin side keeps shipping the same title, author, and date columns WordPress has used for fifteen years. For small sites that is fine.

For agencies running a hundred case studies, doc archives with two hundred entries, or service catalogues with thirty pricing tiers, the gap between rendering flexibility and admin visibility becomes a real cost. The team writes content rich enough for GP Elements to render in custom layouts, and then loses sight of what is in the library because the admin treats every row as a destination. The SleekView table closed part of that gap by surfacing meta as columns.

The chart dashboard closes the rest by surfacing inventory and cadence as figures. Same data, plotted instead of listed, with the editorial and operations teams finally seeing what they have been producing.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Charts for GeneratePress

Yes. GenerateBlocks dynamic content reads postmeta and ACF fields at render time. SleekView Charts reads the same data for the admin dashboard. GenerateBlocks renders on the front end; the chart layer aggregates on the back end.

 

Any CPT registered on the install, including those from GP Premium Elements, GenerateBlocks-related plugins, ACF, Meta Box, custom code, or third-party plugins. The picker lists what is actually there with the meta keys present on each post type.

 

Yes. Taxonomy terms are first-class dashboard filters. Scope the whole board to one service category, one doc version, or one case-study industry and every card recomputes against the filtered source.

 

No. SleekView Charts only loads on its own admin page. Front-end TTFB stays exactly where GeneratePress puts it. Aggregations run against indexed columns and can be cached per saved view to keep the admin responsive.

 

Yes. Each card exports its computed series as CSV or JSON. Filter set and group-by are encoded in the export so the numbers match what is on screen. Useful for stakeholder reports without WordPress access.

 

Yes. The dashboard reads database tables, not templates. Classic GP, FSE-compatible block theme, or hybrid all work the same because the data path is wp_posts and wp_postmeta.

 

ACF and Meta Box repeater rows resolve at query time. Charts can group by a repeater sub-field or count rows per parent post, depending on the question. The picker lists the available sub-fields once a repeater group is selected.

 

Yes. Both layouts read from the same SleekView source. Toggling between the dashboard and the table view is one click without rebuilding filters, so the team works against one consistent dataset.

 

Pricing

More than 1000+
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