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✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount
✨ New Plugin Alert ✨ SleekRank is now available with €50 launch discount

SleekView Charts for VBOUT for WordPress

VBOUT contacts, automations and lead scores live in the VBOUT SaaS. The VBOUT WordPress plugin keeps form-to-list mappings, the tracking-script flag and the submission log in wp_options. SleekView Charts renders that as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards.

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SleekView Charts dashboard for VBOUT for WordPress

VBOUT's WP plugin is a bridge, with chartable bridge data

The VBOUT WordPress plugin renders signup forms via shortcode or block, bridges Contact Form 7 and Gravity Forms submissions to VBOUT lists, and injects the VBOUT tracking script across the site. It writes its API key, list mappings and tracking-script flag to wp_options, and per-form bridges to wp_postmeta on the form post.

The default plugin admin walks an operator through setup, but it does not aggregate. There is no dashboard for submissions per list, no count of pages the tracking script actually loaded on, no view of which form bridge has been quiet for two weeks. On a content site that runs five campaign forms across thirty landing pages, that absence is felt every Monday morning.

SleekView Charts reads the plugin's option array and the form-bridge postmeta directly. A Number card anchors weekly submissions. A Pie splits submissions across mapped VBOUT lists. A Bar ranks form slugs by capture volume. An Area trends submissions over time so a form that broke after a theme switch is visible the same day. Same data, organised as a live dashboard.

Workflow

Turn VBOUT plugin storage into a dashboard

1

Map the VBOUT plugin storage

Point SleekView at the VBOUT settings option, the per-form bridge postmeta and the submission log option. Each becomes a chartable dataset with real column names.
2

Compose the chart cards

Pick Number, Pie, Bar, Area, Line, Radar or Radial cards. Group by list_id, form_id, page_slug or submitted_at and aggregate with Count, Sum, Average, Minimum or Maximum.
3

Save and scope the dashboard

Name it ("Lead capture health", "Tracking coverage") and gate by WordPress capability so marketers, growth and legal each open the cards relevant to them.
4

Drill into the rows

Each card links back to the submission table or the form-bridge audit. The chart shows the shape, the table shows which submission produced it.

Sample dashboard

Charts you can build from VBOUT for WordPress data

Each card reads from the VBOUT plugin's local option store and bridge postmeta. Mix them for a lead capture cockpit or a tracking-script coverage audit.
Number · Default

Submissions this week

Submission rows in the VBOUT log scoped to the last seven days. The headline KPI for any weekly lead-capture review.
Count
Pie · Donut

Submissions by VBOUT list

Share of submissions per mapped VBOUT list. Reveals whether one campaign list is absorbing everything while niche lists go quiet.
Count group by list_id
Bar · Horizontal

Form bridges by source

Count of bridges grouped by whether they originate in VBOUT's own shortcode, Contact Form 7 or Gravity Forms. Useful before a form-plugin migration.
Count group by source_plugin
Area · Gradient

Submissions over time

Daily submissions across every VBOUT-mapped form. A drop after a theme or page-builder change is the cheapest leading indicator a marketing team can wire up.
Count group by submitted_at

Comparison

Default VBOUT plugin reporting vs SleekView Charts

Default VBOUT WP plugin admin

  • Plugin admin is configuration, not reporting
  • No aggregate of submissions per list inside WordPress
  • Per-form bridges open one at a time in their own form plugin's UI
  • Tracking-script coverage isn't summarised across the site
  • No read-only dashboard URL to hand a marketing lead

SleekView Charts

  • Number KPI for weekly submissions from every VBOUT-bridged form
  • Pie split across the VBOUT lists each form posts to
  • Bar grouping bridges by source form plugin
  • Area trend of submissions for fast drop detection
  • Filters carry between chart and table view on the same dataset

Features

What SleekView Charts gives you for VBOUT for WordPress

Dashboard over the bridge log

Render submissions as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards so the lead-capture surface stops being a settings screen and becomes a live performance view.

Bridge-by-bridge audit

Stack VBOUT, Contact Form 7 and Gravity bridges on one bar to see which form ecosystem is doing the most work before a migration decision.

Share a read-only snapshot

Send growth a URL of the lead-capture dashboard or export the filtered cohort to CSV. Reviews work off live numbers, not last week's screenshot.

Audience

Who builds VBOUT for WordPress charts dashboards with SleekView

Email marketers

Anchor weekly reviews on submission count, list mix and time trend. Catch a quiet form before the next VBOUT send drops into a list that stopped growing.

Growth and CRO

Rank form bridges by source and submissions by page slug to spot the high-volume capture combinations. Replicate the winning pattern on adjacent pages.

Marketing ops

Track which VBOUT lists are receiving submissions and which mapped lists have been silent. A flatlined pie slice is the visible sign of an archived target list.

The bigger picture

A bridge plugin earns its keep when its bridge data is legible

VBOUT's value sits in its SaaS, with automation, lead scoring and campaign analytics living one step beyond the WordPress admin. That puts the WP-side plugin in a quiet support role: render forms, bridge submissions, inject the tracking script. The bridge data the plugin writes locally is small but it is exactly what tells a marketing team whether the bridge is performing on its own side.

Charting submissions per list, ranking bridges by source plugin and trending volume over time turns a settings screen into an early warning system. A redesign that removes a form embed shows up as a flat area chart the same week, not as a missing-leads email two months later. A mapping that points at an archived list surfaces as a flatline on a single pie slice.

Same VBOUT plugin data, organised as something the team can read at a glance.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Charts for VBOUT for WordPress

No. Contacts, lead scores and automations stay in VBOUT, where lead scoring actually runs. SleekView Charts reads only the WP-side plugin storage: settings, form-bridge postmeta and the submission log. Anything VBOUT writes locally is fair game for a card.

 

Settings, the API token and per-list mappings live in wp_options. Form-bridge mappings (which VBOUT list a Contact Form 7 or Gravity form posts to) live in wp_postmeta on the form post. SleekView reads both paths and pivots them into named columns.

 

Yes. Each dashboard respects a form-ID filter, so a campaign-form audit dashboard scopes every card to one form and surfaces submissions, list mix and time trend just for that form. Useful for a single landing-page campaign.

 

Yes. The plugin writes bridge mappings to each form plugin's standard postmeta location, and SleekView reads all three. A mixed-form site still produces one clean chart dataset, with a source-plugin column you can use as a grouping axis.

 

No. Chart queries hit the option store and postmeta on read, never on write. Form submissions continue to post through the VBOUT runtime path with no added work, which keeps capture latency unchanged for visitors.

 

Yes. The tracking-script enable flag is a single boolean in the VBOUT settings option. On a multisite roll-up, SleekView shows that flag as a column on every site, so a staging-on, production-off mismatch surfaces as an obvious chart split rather than a forgotten checkbox.

 

Some VBOUT plugin versions disable the audit log by default. SleekView shows an empty-state on the submission cards in that case, and the settings and mapping cards (over wp_options) continue to render so the rest of the dashboard stays useful.

 

Yes. Each saved chart dashboard is scoped by WordPress capability. Marketers see the lead-capture cards while ops sees the tracking flag and bridge audit, with each role saving its own filter presets on the same VBOUT dataset.

 

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