SleekView Charts for PublishPress Series
Read the Series taxonomy alongside part-order postmeta and the posts table, then chart parts per series, status mix, and publishing cadence on one dashboard inside WP Admin.
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Series and parts as a real reporting view
PublishPress Series turns related posts into navigable sequences: tutorials, video chapters, multi-part guides. SleekView's Table view already joins the series taxonomy with the part-order postmeta and the posts table into one ledger. Charts uses the same join to answer the questions content leads actually ask: how long is each series, what's the draft-to-published split, which series are stale, and when did the last part go out.
Each part row carries series term, part number, post status, author, and last update. Aggregating those columns gives a Number for total active series, a Bar for parts per series, a Donut for status mix, and an Area for parts published over time. The chart cards line up with how editors plan and audit long-running tutorials.
The plugin still owns navigation templates and front-end series logic. SleekView Charts is the series management overview that long-running tutorial sites have always wanted.
Workflow
How Charts read PublishPress Series data
Point Charts at the Series join
Pick the series columns
Add four chart cards
Filter once, chart everywhere
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from PublishPress Series data
Active series
Count
Parts per series
Count
group by series_term
Status mix
Count
group by post_status
Parts published per month
Count
group by post_date
Comparison
Default PublishPress Series reporting vs SleekView Charts
PublishPress Series admin
- Default admin lists series and posts but not the cross-series shape
- Parts-per-series count isn't visible at a glance
- Draft-versus-published mix per series needs manual counting
- Stale series only surface when an editor stumbles on them
- Publishing cadence over time isn't reported
SleekView Charts
- Reads the same Series + part-order join the parts Table uses
- Per-series part counts are built-in groupBy
- Status mix splits published, draft, and pending across all series
- post_date time-series exposes accelerating and stalling content
- Filters carry from the parts Table to the dashboard
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for PublishPress Series
Per-series depth
Group by series term on a Bar card to rank the deepest series and the shortest ones.
Status-aware breakdowns
Donut variants split published, draft, and pending so editors can find a half-published series in one glance.
Publishing cadence
Area and Line cards use post_date as groupBy for monthly cadence across every series.
Audience
Who builds Series charts dashboards with SleekView
Tutorial publishers
Track which tutorial series are reaching part ten and which are stalling after part two so the next investment goes where the audience is.
Multi-part video sites
See chapter counts per series to confirm course completion levels before promoting them.
Long-form guide authors
Audit a multi-month series from a status Donut to spot the chapters still in draft.
The bigger picture
Why series content deserves a chart, not a list
Series content scales differently from standalone posts. One series can hold thirty parts, another can stall at three, and the question is rarely about a single post but about the shape of the whole sequence. PublishPress Series handles the per-series and per-part workflow well, less well the cross-series overview.
SleekView Charts gives that overview with four cards that read the same join the parts Table uses, so the dashboard, the table, and the export agree. Editorial leads can plan their next investment based on which series have momentum and which have stalled, rather than scrolling through the taxonomy looking for clues. The plugin keeps the navigation and front-end logic; the dashboard adds the bird's-eye view.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for PublishPress Series
From the PublishPress Series taxonomy joined with wp_term_relationships, the part-order postmeta, and the posts table. The same join the parts Table view uses.
 Charts aggregate, so order doesn't matter to the totals. The parts Table still uses the order meta for in-row sorting and inline reordering.
 Yes. A view-level filter on series_term applies to every chart card on the dashboard.
 By post_status. The status Donut splits draft, pending, and published explicitly.
 Yes. If a post is in two series terms, the parts-per-series Bar counts it once per term.
 By grouping post_date into months on the Area card. The result is a monthly volume curve across every series.
 Reorders change the order meta, not the count or status, so chart totals stay the same. The Table view is where reorders matter.
 No. The plugin still owns the taxonomy, the front-end logic, and the navigation. SleekView Charts is the reporting overlay.
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