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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 Popup Builder: real popup stats

SleekView queries the popupbuilder custom post type, the sgpb_subscribers table, the sgpb_subscription_form_data postmeta, and the popup statistics counters Popup Builder writes so you can chart shown counts, opt-in rate, and subscriber growth from inside WordPress.

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SleekView Charts dashboard for Popup Builder by Sygnoos

Popup Builder has tons of data, no dashboard

Popup Builder by Sygnoos uses a popupbuilder custom post type for every popup, with configuration stored as sgpb-popup-options-{id} postmeta. Subscribers captured by Subscription popups land in a dedicated wp_sg_subscribers table with columns like firstName, email, subscriptionType, cDate, and status. The plugin also writes show and click counters into the popup's own postmeta whenever the Statistics module is enabled.

The default admin gives you a Subscribers list, a basic Statistics page, and a list of popups, but no real cross-popup analytics. SleekView reads the same custom post type, postmeta, and subscribers table without an export step and surfaces the missing dashboard: shows per popup, opt-in rate, subscribers per day, subscription type mix.

For a site running 10 to 30 popups with the Subscription module on, with several hundred subscribers a month flowing through wp_sg_subscribers, this becomes a four-chart dashboard that finally shows which popups perform, which weeks delivered the most leads, and which subscription types dominate the funnel.

Workflow

From popupbuilder posts to a real dashboard

1

Target the popupbuilder CPT

Set the chart source to wp_posts filtered by post_type equals popupbuilder. Popup Builder writes every popup as one row of this CPT, so all SleekView grouping and filtering applies directly without any custom helper code.
2

Join the subscribers table

For opt-in charts, switch the source to the wp_sg_subscribers custom table. Group by the subscriptionType column to break down popup categories, or by cDate to bucket subscribers per day, week, or month for trend charts.
3

Pull statistics meta

The Statistics module writes show and click counters into the popup's postmeta. SleekView surfaces those meta keys as numeric columns so charts can sum show counts across all popups or compare a single popup's lifetime impressions to another's.
4

Mount on a popup dashboard

Pin all four charts on a SleekView dashboard called Popups. Restrict it to a marketing or editor role, so the team has a single place to compare popup health rather than clicking through 30 popup admin screens or exporting CSV from Sygnoos.

Sample dashboard

A popup dashboard built from Popup Builder data

Each chart reads from the popupbuilder custom post type, the wp_sg_subscribers table, and the statistics postmeta Popup Builder writes on every popup show and click event.
Number · Default

New subscribers this month

A KPI counting rows from wp_sg_subscribers where cDate falls within the current calendar month and status equals 1 (active), with the previous month shown underneath so the marketing team sees whether the popup stack is growing the list.
Count
Pie · Donut

Subscribers by subscription type

A donut grouping wp_sg_subscribers rows by the subscriptionType column populated by Popup Builder when a visitor opts in, showing which configured popup types (free, paid, lead, contest) actually drive the most signups.
Count group by subscriptionType
Bar · Horizontal

Top popups by shows

Horizontal bar across all popupbuilder posts, summing the sgpb-popup-statistics-show postmeta value per popup so the heaviest impression workhorses appear first, with the rest of the catalog sorted underneath them.
Sum(sgpb-popup-statistics-show) group by post_title
Area · Gradient

Subscriber growth over time

Gradient area chart counting wp_sg_subscribers rows bucketed by cDate, useful for spotting subscriber surges after a content launch or a sudden drop after a popup misconfiguration over the past 90 days of activity.
Count group by cDate

Comparison

Popup Builder Statistics page vs SleekView

Default Popup Builder admin

  • Popup Builder's Statistics page lists raw counts per popup, no trend lines
  • Subscribers list shows rows but no breakdown by subscription type chart
  • No way to combine subscriber growth with WooCommerce revenue charts
  • Cannot restrict popup analytics to a marketing-only role without code
  • No exit-intent versus on-load conversion comparison anywhere in admin

SleekView Charts

  • Charts directly off the popupbuilder custom post type
  • Reads the wp_sg_subscribers table for opt-in rows
  • Sums sgpb-popup-statistics-show postmeta per popup
  • Mixes popup data with WooCommerce, FluentCRM, or BuddyBoss on one screen
  • Per-role dashboards so marketing, ops, and editors see different views

Features

What SleekView Charts gives you for Popup Builder by Sygnoos

CPT plus custom table

SleekView can query both the popupbuilder custom post type and the wp_sg_subscribers custom table within a single dashboard. That covers both the popup catalog side and the lead capture side, with no custom plumbing needed between the two data sources.

Filter on subscriber status

wp_sg_subscribers carries a status column (1 active, 0 unsubscribed, plus rejection codes). Filter on status equals 1 plus cDate within the last 30 days to get clean active-only growth, or include all statuses to see churn versus growth at once.

Fast on big subscriber tables

Sites running Popup Builder for years can have tens of thousands of rows in wp_sg_subscribers. SleekView leverages the cDate and email indexes plus WordPress object cache, keeping pie and area queries responsive even on the largest installs we have profiled.

Audience

Where Popup Builder teams use SleekView

Identify the workhorse popups

The shows-per-popup bar surfaces the top 5 popups driving most impressions. Marketing concentrates A/B testing budget on those rather than spreading effort across long-tail popups that almost no one ever sees on the live site.

Track campaign launches

After a new content campaign, the daily subscriber area chart confirms whether the popup stack picked up the additional traffic. A flat line means the new pages forgot the popup; a rising line means the rollout reached the intended audience.

Compliance reporting

The status pie shows the share of active versus unsubscribed records in wp_sg_subscribers. Compliance can hand a CSV export of the unsubscribed segment to a privacy auditor without needing direct database access at all.

The bigger picture

Why a SleekView dashboard beats the built-in

Popup Builder is one of the most installed popup plugins on WordPress, used by 200,000 plus sites, and it stores a surprising amount of data locally. The base plugin gives you a Statistics page with per-popup counts and a Subscribers list with per-row entries, both useful, both limited. Neither answers the questions teams actually have in week-to-week marketing work.

Which popup converts best per impression? When did subscriber growth stall? Is the subscription type mix shifting? SleekView reads the same popupbuilder CPT, the same wp_sg_subscribers table, and the same statistics postmeta, then turns that data into a four-chart dashboard that lives inside WP admin. Marketing gets a single page where they can answer the questions the plugin's own admin cannot. Compliance gets clean status breakdowns.

Editors get a per-author view of which posts host which popups. The plugin keeps doing what it does best while SleekView fills the visualization gap that has always been there.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Charts for Popup Builder by Sygnoos

The popupbuilder custom post type for the popup catalog, the wp_sg_subscribers custom table for opt-in rows, and the sgpb-popup-statistics-show and sgpb-popup-statistics-click postmeta values for impression and click counters. All three are written by the plugin without any add-on.

 

No. The popupbuilder CPT, wp_sg_subscribers table, and statistics postmeta exist in the free version. The Pro version adds advanced popup types and analytics extras, but every chart shown in the preview can be built off the free plugin's data alone.

 

Yes. SleekView supports calculated fields, so a chart can divide the sgpb-popup-statistics-click postmeta sum by the sgpb-popup-statistics-show postmeta sum per popup and display the result as a percentage Bar chart, with the highest-converting popups appearing first.

 

No. SleekView is strictly read-only against Popup Builder's tables and meta. It never inserts, updates, or deletes subscriber rows. The plugin remains the sole writer, so you can safely uninstall SleekView at any time without affecting your subscriber list or popup configuration.

 

Yes. Every SleekView dashboard supports role-based visibility. Build a Popup Dashboard restricted to the marketing role, and the team sees subscriber growth and shows-per-popup charts without needing any access to wp_sg_subscribers or the underlying plugin settings.

 

Not noticeably. SleekView leverages the existing cDate, email, and status indexes on wp_sg_subscribers and the meta_key index on wp_postmeta. Cache TTLs are configurable per chart so the most-viewed charts stay snappy even on installs with 100,000 plus subscriber rows.

 

Yes. Every chart exposes a CSV export of the underlying rows, including subscriber email, name, subscription type, and cDate. Use the export to feed marketing automation systems or to send a compliance auditor the exact subset of the list they have requested.

 

No. Popup Builder still designs and serves popups; SleekView just visualizes the resulting data. The two complement each other, with Popup Builder owning the front-end behavior and SleekView owning the analytics layer that lets the team compare popups and measure outcomes.

 

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