SleekView Charts for Theme My Login
SleekView Charts joins wp_users with the moderation and login activity Theme My Login tracks, then renders pending approvals, failed logins, signup trends, and lockouts as chart cards on one screen.
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Front-end login is solved. The back office isn't.
Theme My Login does the front-end job well: login, registration, and password reset move into your theme without rebuilding from scratch. The back office still leans on the default WordPress Users screen, which has no concept of pending registrations, locked accounts, failed-login counts, or dormant cohorts.
SleekView Charts joins wp_users with the TML moderation status and login activity captured from standard WordPress hooks, then renders chart cards. Pending approvals as a Number, failed-login spikes as an Area, dormant cohort sizes as a Bar, and registration trends as another Area on the same dashboard.
For sites that actually moderate sign-ups, that is the missing reporting layer next to the moderation queue.
Workflow
Turn TML data into a moderation dashboard
Join wp_users with TML state
Promote audit fields
Add KPI and activity cards
Pin moderator dashboards
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from Theme My Login data
Pending approvals
Count
Signups by status
Count
group by tml_status
Failed logins per hour
Count
group by tml_failed_at
New registrations per day
Count
group by user_registered
Comparison
Theme My Login default admin vs SleekView Charts
TML default admin
- No native dashboard for pending approvals or failed logins
- Default Users screen ignores moderation status
- Failed-login activity not surfaced anywhere in the plugin
- No trend chart for signups or dormant cohort growth
- Audit fields like last login require custom code to expose
SleekView Charts
- Joins wp_users with TML moderation status and login hooks
- Pending-approval Number card sits next to the moderation queue
- Failed-login Area card for brute-force triage
- Signup trend Area card for launch and campaign measurement
- Saved moderator dashboards gated by capability
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for Theme My Login
Users plus activity
Last login, failed attempts today, and moderation state read off the same dataset as the username, so chart cards span identity and activity together.
Moderation pipeline
Pending, approved, and locked counts surface as Number cards plus a Donut, so the moderation pipeline is one screen rather than three admin tabs.
Brute-force visibility
Failed-login Area cards turn the silent log into a chart, so incident triage starts with the right curve rather than a grep across access logs.
Audience
Who builds Theme My Login charts dashboards with SleekView
Registration moderation
Watch pending counts and signup trends together so moderators can size the backlog and approve in bulk during the busy windows.
Brute-force triage
Open the failed-login Area card during incident response and see the spike, the duration, and the recovery on one chart.
Member health
Spot dormant cohorts on the Bar card and run reactivation campaigns against the right segment, not against everyone in wp_users.
The bigger picture
Why TML sites need charts on top of the moderation queue
Front-end login is the easy part. The hard part is what happens once registrations start flowing in, the fake sign-ups during a launch, the brute-force attempts against a known username, the dormant members the team forgot to clean up, and the locked accounts whose owners email support directly. The default WordPress Users screen treats every user as identical, and Theme My Login's settings page describes capability rules without ever showing the resulting activity.
SleekView Charts joins the user table with the TML moderation status and the login hooks the plugin already fires, and renders the joined dataset as Number, Pie, Bar, and Area cards. The moderation queue and the audit curve sit next to each other, which is the layer site operators have been building manually for years.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for Theme My Login
No. TML still owns the front-end login, registration, and password reset. SleekView Charts reads the moderation and activity data those features produce.
 Failed-login events come from the standard WordPress wp_login_failed hook, which TML fires alongside its own logic. SleekView reads from the same hook.
 Yes. The TML moderation status is a column on the dataset and a valid groupBy for Pie and Bar cards, so pending, approved, and locked counts render as charts.
 Yes. Bulk approvals go through TML hooks, and the dashboard re-reads the dataset on refresh, so the next load shows the new counts.
 Yes. user_registered is a groupBy for Area cards, so daily, weekly, and monthly signup trends are one configuration step.
 Yes. The last-login column is a groupBy for time-bucket Bar cards, so dormant 90 and 180 day cohorts read off the chart directly.
 Yes. Saved dashboards are capability-gated, so registration moderation and security triage can each have their own pinned screen.
 Yes. Bulk approvals run through TML hooks, so welcome emails, audit log entries, and any custom code on those hooks fire as expected.
 Pricing
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