SleekView Charts for SuiteCRM Bridge
SuiteCRM bridge plugins mirror Leads, Contacts, Accounts and Opportunities into WordPress custom tables on every sync. SleekView Charts reads those tables and renders inflow, sync health and pipeline shape as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards.
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SuiteCRM lives outside WP, the bridge data lives inside
SuiteCRM is the open-source CRM that descended from SugarCRM CE, and integration plugins for WordPress create the bridge between site forms and SuiteCRM's Leads, Contacts, Accounts and Opportunities modules. Every submission that fires the bridge gets mirrored into custom WordPress tables for the integration to replay if a SuiteCRM API call fails or if a webhook back from SuiteCRM updates the record later.
The mirror tables on WordPress are the operational record of the integration. They store the SuiteCRM record ID, the assigned user, the lead status, the opportunity stage and amount, the sync result and the timestamp of the last push. The bridge plugin's admin shows them as a paginated log, which is fine for triage and broken for inflow or pipeline visibility. Sales ops, marketing and integrations each need different aggregates of the same data.
SleekView Charts reads the mirror tables directly. A Number card anchors total leads pushed to SuiteCRM in the period. A Pie splits records by sync status. A Bar groups opportunities by stage with a value-sum on amount. An Area trends pushes per day so campaign spikes and webhook outages become a curve everyone can read. The bridge keeps doing its job. The dashboard makes the WordPress side of that job legible.
Workflow
Turn SuiteCRM bridge tables into a dashboard
Map the bridge mirror tables
Compose the chart cards
Save and scope the dashboard
Share or export
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from SuiteCRM bridge data
Leads pushed (30 days)
Count
Records by sync status
Count
group by sync_status
Opportunity value by stage
Sum(amount)
group by opportunity_stage
Lead pushes over time
Count
group by pushed_at
Comparison
Default SuiteCRM bridge admin vs SleekView Charts
Default bridge admin
- Mirror tables shown as a paginated log with limited filtering
- Sync result per row, no share of the whole base
- Pipeline shape requires switching to the SuiteCRM admin
- Lead inflow trend not surfaced as a time-series on WordPress
- No read-only dashboard URL for non-admin stakeholders
SleekView Charts
- KPI for lead pushes in a rolling window
- Pie split across synced, pending, failed bridge records
- Bar of opportunity value by stage from WordPress
- Area trend of pushes per day to catch outages and inflow spikes
- Filters carry between bridge table view and chart cards
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for SuiteCRM Bridge
Bridge data as a dashboard
Render the SuiteCRM mirror tables as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards. Sync health and opportunity shape become a glance, not a SuiteCRM round-trip.
Sync failures as a share
A KPI for failed sync count, not a hidden log column. Integrations ops sees a growing failed share before sales reports a missing record.
Share a read-only snapshot
Send sales leadership a URL of the WordPress-side bridge dashboard or export the failed-sync cohort for a remediation sprint.
Audience
Who builds SuiteCRM bridge charts dashboards with SleekView
Integrations ops
Watch sync status share and bridge push volume. A failed-sync spike on the area chart is the first signal of a SuiteCRM API key rotation or webhook regression.
Marketing ops
Trend lead pushes per day against campaign launches. Confirm whether the paid push delivered the lead volume promised, all from WordPress.
Sales ops
Sum opportunity amount per stage on a bar. Spot a top-heavy or bottom-thin pipeline early, without leaving the WordPress admin the bridge already populates.
The bigger picture
Why bridge data deserves a WordPress dashboard
SuiteCRM is an excellent open-source CRM, and most teams that use it through a WordPress bridge end up running two operational surfaces in parallel: WordPress for site, forms and submissions, SuiteCRM for sales pipeline and accounts. That separation is fine for sales reviews and awkward for integration health questions, which are inherently WordPress-side. The mirror tables already exist because the bridge needs them for replay and update.
SleekView Charts simply renders them as a dashboard a marketing, sales or integrations lead can read in seconds. Lead inflow becomes a chart, sync failures become a KPI, opportunity shape becomes a horizontal bar. SuiteCRM keeps owning the CRM record.
WordPress owns the operational picture of how WordPress is feeding it, and the team stops round-tripping between two admin surfaces every time a metric question comes up.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for SuiteCRM Bridge
The bridge plugin's own custom tables on the WordPress side. Table names depend on which SuiteCRM bridge is installed, but the shape is consistent: lead, contact, account and opportunity mirror tables with sync status, owner, stage and amount columns plus a pushed_at timestamp.
 No. SleekView Charts only reads the WordPress mirror tables the bridge plugin writes. The SuiteCRM REST API and the SuiteCRM database remain untouched, with the WordPress side acting as the operational record the bridge already maintains.
 Yes. Group by opportunity_stage with an aggregation of Sum on the amount column. The horizontal Bar card surfaces pipeline value per stage from the WordPress side, useful for marketing and integrations reviews that need a quick number.
 Yes. Each SuiteCRM module (Leads, Contacts, Accounts, Opportunities) maps to its own bridge mirror table, and SleekView Charts treats each table as a separate dataset. Cards can live on per-module dashboards or be merged into a cross-module view.
 If the bridge plugin mirrors custom modules into their own custom tables (most bridge plugins support this), SleekView Charts treats them the same way it treats core modules. Custom field columns become first-class group-by candidates for the cards.
 Yes. The area trend of pushed_at timestamps reveals a cliff edge when sync stops. A growing failed sync_status share on the pie surfaces a creeping increase before it becomes a full outage, giving integrations time to investigate before sales loses records.
 Yes. Bridge plugins typically index their mirror tables on sync_status, pushed_at and the external SuiteCRM record ID. SleekView Charts reuses those indexes for the group-by queries the cards run, so even high-volume integrations render the dashboard quickly.
 Yes. Each saved dashboard is scoped by WordPress capability. Sales ops sees pipeline cards, marketing sees inflow cards and integrations ops sees the sync-health cards, with each role saving filter presets independently.
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