SleekView Charts for PowerPack for Elementor
Read _elementor_data for every Elementor post and the pp_global_settings toggle map, then chart PowerPack widget usage, template coverage and edit cadence from the same indexed columns the audit table reads.
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PowerPack writes the widget data, charts read it as a source
PowerPack ships seventy-plus widgets, a White Label module and Pro display conditions on top of Elementor. Each used widget appears in _elementor_data with a pp- type prefix. The plugin holds its widget and module toggle map in pp_global_settings at the site level, plus integration settings (reCAPTCHA, Mailchimp, ConvertKit) in adjacent options.
The default PowerPack admin is a tabbed list of toggles. It cannot answer "which PowerPack widgets are actually in use", "is PowerPack adoption growing" or "how much edit activity comes from PowerPack pages". SleekView Charts reads the same meta and options records and renders the answers as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards.
Because data sits in standard postmeta and options, chart cards work across staging, prod and a fresh import. Audits and disable-candidate reviews become measurable artifacts instead of click-throughs across the toggle screens.
Workflow
Turn PowerPack meta into a dashboard
Pick the source posts
wp_posts filtered to rows with _elementor_data. SleekView decodes the JSON and exposes PowerPack widget slugs (those prefixed with pp-) as a normalised column.
Compose the chart cards
pp_global_settings, and an Area for edit cadence.
Filter once, apply everywhere
Save and share
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from PowerPack data
_elementor_data and toggle state out of pp_global_settings to give PowerPack a real reporting surface.
Pages using PowerPack
_elementor_data contains at least one widget whose type starts with pp-.
Count
Top PowerPack widgets
Count
group by widget_slug
Widget toggle state
pp_global_settings, useful for trimming asset payload.
Count
group by enabled
PowerPack edits per week
Count
group by post_modified
Comparison
Default PowerPack reporting vs SleekView Charts
Default PowerPack settings
- Settings screen is a tabbed toggle list with no usage count per widget
- Per-widget page coverage requires a search, not a chart
- Form widgets and mailing widgets have no submission summary at the toggle level
- Edit cadence on PowerPack pages is invisible from the list view
- No shareable audit URL outside the WP admin
SleekView Charts
- KPI of pages using any PowerPack widget across the install
- Bar of widgets ranked by page count, including zero-use widgets
-
Pie of enabled vs disabled widgets from
pp_global_settings - Area of edit cadence on pages that embed PowerPack widgets
- Same filters as the audit table apply to every chart card
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for PowerPack for Elementor
Real PowerPack meta drives the cards
Cards read _elementor_data and the pp_global_settings toggle map. Every aggregation maps to a value PowerPack already writes.
Filters span table and chart
Scope to a single widget slug or to a group of widgets (forms, listings, marketing) and every chart card stays in sync with the audit table.
Surface disable candidates
A Bar card sorted ascending exposes widgets enabled site-wide but used on zero pages, the cleanest signal for trimming the per-widget asset payload.
Audience
Who builds PowerPack charts dashboards with SleekView
Agencies
Per-client PowerPack audits as a chart board, refreshed on every visit, replacing the per-page click-through that drives most clean-up reviews.
Performance leads
Disable-candidate views feed straight into a payload-trimming pass on PowerPack's per-widget CSS and JS bundles.
Editorial ops
A ranking of top widgets by page count surfaces the PowerPack widgets editors actually use, useful when building grounded training and templates.
The bigger picture
Why PowerPack sites benefit from a chart view
PowerPack's appeal is breadth: seventy widgets, white-label support, Pro display conditions and a long list of marketing-flavoured form widgets. Breadth on day one becomes inventory on year two, and the default settings screen treats that inventory as a flat toggle list. "What is enabled" stops being the interesting question once an install has carried PowerPack for a while.
"What is used" matters more, and so does "is anyone still touching these pages". SleekView Charts reads _elementor_data and pp_global_settings as a dashboard source. A Number card pins coverage.
A Bar ranks widgets by real use. A Pie compares enabled to active. An Area trends edit cadence.
The plugin keeps owning the editor, the chart view gives the surrounding governance an evidence base.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for PowerPack for Elementor
Directly from wp_posts and wp_postmeta (the _elementor_data key), plus the pp_global_settings option that stores enabled/disabled state for each widget and module.
Yes. PowerPack widgets carry a pp- type prefix inside _elementor_data. SleekView decodes the JSON and exposes a normalised widget-slug column for grouping in Bar or Pie cards.
Cross-reference toggle state from pp_global_settings with usage count from _elementor_data. SleekView surfaces both as columns, so a Bar card sorted ascending exposes enabled-but-zero-use widgets directly.
Yes. PowerPack widgets live inside the same _elementor_data JSON as Pro, core and other addon widgets. SleekView Charts can chart them together or filter to the PowerPack slugs only.
Yes. Group an Area or Line card by post_modified on the set of posts whose _elementor_data contains a pp- widget type. The curve shows whether usage is growing or shrinking.
Queries hit indexed columns on wp_posts and the indexed meta_key column on postmeta. Widget-slug decoding can be backed by a lightweight cache so dashboards render fast at scale.
Charts are read-only summaries. To act on an insight, switch to the audit table filtered to the same slice. Inline edits route through the standard WordPress update path.
 No. The settings screen still owns toggling widgets and modules. SleekView Charts adds a reporting surface on top of the data PowerPack already writes.
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