SleekView Charts for TinyEmail WP
SleekView Charts reads the TinyEmail API key, audience mappings, opt-in defaults and sync timestamps the plugin writes to wp_options and wp_postmeta. Coverage, bridges and sync health render as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards.
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TinyEmail's local footprint deserves a coverage chart
TinyEmail is an AI-assisted email marketing platform whose WordPress plugin connects forms and audiences to the cloud. A serialized settings array in wp_options holds the API key, default audience ID and the opt-in default flag. Per-form bridges to TinyEmail audiences sit on postmeta when the supported form-plugin integration is enabled. Sync timestamps and webhook health flags are written into options on each round-trip.
The plugin's admin focuses on the cloud experience and shows a single connection status pill. It does not show how many forms bridge into TinyEmail audiences, which audience is the most-fed, whether opt-in default is on across every blog of a multisite, or whether the sync has been stale for hours. Each of those is a query against options and postmeta, and the default UI never aggregates them.
SleekView Charts reads the TinyEmail plugin's WP-side data directly. A Number card anchors total active bridges. A Pie splits bridges by source form plugin. A Bar ranks TinyEmail audiences by how many forms feed them. An Area trends sync attempts over time to surface webhook outages and API key rotations.
Workflow
Turn the TinyEmail WP-side data into a dashboard
Pivot the TinyEmail settings
Read every form bridge
Compose the chart cards
Save and scope the dashboard
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from TinyEmail WP data
Active TinyEmail bridges
Count
Bridges by source form plugin
Count
group by form_plugin
Bridges per audience
Count
group by tinyemail_audience
Sync attempts over time
Count
group by sync_attempt_at
Comparison
Default TinyEmail plugin admin vs SleekView Charts
Default TinyEmail plugin admin
- Plugin admin renders one connection status, not a coverage chart
- Bridge coverage across the site only visible by listing forms one by one
- Audience usage across forms isn't surfaced as a ranking
- Sync health shown as a single badge, no time series
- No read-only dashboard URL for marketing ops or privacy stakeholders
SleekView Charts
- KPI for active TinyEmail bridges across the site
- Pie split across the supported form-plugin bridge counts
- Bar ranking TinyEmail audiences by how many forms feed them
- Area trend of sync attempts to spot webhook outages
- Filters carry between bridge table view and chart cards
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for TinyEmail WP
Coverage as a dashboard
Render every TinyEmail bridge as Number, Pie and Bar cards. The marketing team sees the lead-capture footprint in one screen, not one form at a time.
Opt-in default audit
Surface the opt-in default flag as a chartable field. Privacy reviews scan a Pie split across the network instead of clicking through each blog's settings.
Sync health as a trend
An area chart of sync attempts catches webhook outages before they manifest as missing subscribers on the TinyEmail side.
Audience
Who builds TinyEmail WP charts dashboards with SleekView
Email marketers
Anchor on bridge coverage and audience mapping shape. Plan the next consolidation pass with the chart instead of a postmeta spreadsheet.
Privacy ops
Audit opt-in default and consent overrides across every bridge in one screen. The dashboard becomes the compliance review document.
Agency support
Triage "my TinyEmail collection stopped working" tickets in seconds. The sync trend isolates webhook-side issues from form-side issues immediately.
The bigger picture
TinyEmail's WP-side coverage deserves a chart layer
TinyEmail's WordPress plugin is correctly thin, the cloud owns campaigns, automation and analytics. The trade-off is that the WP-side surface becomes invisible. A bridge wired to an archived audience silently posts into the void.
An opt-in default flipped during a 2am settings tour stays unnoticed until a regulator emails. SleekView Charts treats the bridge dataset and the settings option as a chartable input, so coverage, audience usage and sync health become a dashboard a marketing lead reads in seconds. The data is already in wp_options and wp_postmeta, the chart layer makes it operational instead of buried in a settings tab.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for TinyEmail WP
Only the WP-side TinyEmail plugin storage: the settings option in wp_options and the per-form bridge postmeta. Subscribers, campaigns and analytics stay in the TinyEmail cloud.
 No. Subscribers and audiences live in TinyEmail's dashboard. SleekView Charts focuses on the WordPress footprint: bridge coverage, audience mappings, opt-in defaults, sync state. Subscriber analytics is a separate question for the TinyEmail SaaS.
 Bridges from the form plugins TinyEmail integrates with (Gravity, Fluent, Contact Form 7, WPForms) are read from their respective postmeta locations. A mixed-form site still produces one clean bridge audit.
 Yes. Each multisite blog has its own TinyEmail settings option and its own form bridges. SleekView aggregates the dataset across blogs, so a network-wide audit replaces opening each blog's admin individually.
 Yes. Edits to the audience mapping write back to postmeta on the source form. The next submission posts to the new audience. Cloud-side audience definitions belong in the TinyEmail dashboard.
 Yes. An optional TinyEmail API call returns the active audience IDs. Bridges pointing at audiences no longer in the active set land in a filter on the dashboard, ready to repoint or retire.
 Yes. The dataset is one row per bridge, which stays small even on sites with many forms. The chart cards render the dashboard within seconds.
 Yes. Each saved dashboard is scoped by WordPress capability. Marketing sees coverage cards while privacy sees opt-in cards, with each role saving its own filter presets.
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