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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 White Label CMS: branding coverage KPIs

White Label CMS stores every branding override (login logos, dashboard widgets, admin bar items, footer text) inside wlcms_options. SleekView Charts reads that option and renders branded screens, hidden items, and customization coverage per role.

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SleekView Charts dashboard for White Label CMS

From a long settings page to a brand-coverage dashboard

White Label CMS turns WP Admin into something a client never feels they are using WordPress on. Login logo, dashboard widgets, admin bar items, footer text, role-specific menus, custom welcome panels, and a long list of toggles all live in the wlcms_options option. The plugin's UI is a tabbed settings page that lets agencies wire all of that up.

SleekView Charts parses the same option into a row-per-setting-per-role structure and renders the picture. A Number KPI counts active branding overrides on the install. A Pie chart splits overrides across categories: Login, Dashboard, Admin Bar, Menus, Footer. A Bar chart ranks roles by branded-coverage percentage, surfacing whether subscriber-facing screens look as polished as administrator-facing ones. An Area chart trends branding edits over time when the plugin's change log option is populated.

For agency networks running dozens of client installs, the dashboard becomes the standardisation report. Sites where branding coverage is below the agency's baseline stand out as short bars. The plugin still owns the settings page; SleekView Charts owns the screen that says whether each install is actually finished, branded, and ready to hand over.

Workflow

Read wlcms_options as branding data

1

Point at the wlcms option

SleekView Charts parses wlcms_options into a row-per-setting structure. Category, key, value, default, and role all become groupable columns. Each toggle and image override appears as a chart row.
2

Add the coverage KPI

A Number card counting active overrides with a delta against the default. The single chart that says whether White Label CMS was actually configured beyond installing it.
3

Split by category

Donut grouping overrides across Login, Dashboard, Admin Bar, Menus, and Footer. Surfaces which areas the agency customized and which were left at WordPress defaults.
4

Compare role coverage

Horizontal bar of branded-screens count per role. Editor and Subscriber should match the Administrator coverage if branding is consistent; gaps surface as shorter bars on the chart.

Sample dashboard

White-label branding dashboard

Four chart cards built on top of the wlcms_options branding store, surfacing per-category and per-role coverage as KPIs the settings page never visualises.
Number · Default

Active branding overrides

Count of settings in wlcms_options whose value differs from the WordPress default. Agencies use this as the headline KPI for whether a client install was actually branded after handover, not just installed.
Count
Pie · Donut

Overrides by category

Donut splitting branding overrides across Login, Dashboard, Admin Bar, Menus, Footer, and Custom Code. Surfaces which areas the agency customized and which were left at WordPress defaults across the install.
Count group by category
Bar · Horizontal

Branded coverage per role

Horizontal bar counting branded screens reachable by each role. Editor and Subscriber bars should match Administrator if branding is consistent; gaps surface as shorter bars ready for a final-mile fix.
Count group by role
Bar · Default

Hidden default items

Bar counting items hidden via wlcms_options grouped by category. Default WordPress widgets, menu entries, and admin bar links each get a slice, useful for documenting client-specific simplifications.
Count group by category

Comparison

Default White Label CMS settings vs SleekView Charts

Default WLCMS settings tabs

  • Settings page is a tabbed form, no KPIs or chart cards
  • No coverage metric for how branded each role's admin is
  • Override count per category lives only across many tabs
  • Network-wide consistency requires opening each site by hand
  • Audit conversations rely on screenshots, not data

SleekView Charts

  • Reads wlcms_options as a row-per-setting source live
  • Number KPI for active branding overrides with a delta
  • Per-category donut for Login, Dashboard, Admin Bar, Menus
  • Per-role coverage bar to surface gaps between Editor and Admin
  • Hidden default items count for client-simplification audits

Features

What SleekView Charts gives you for White Label CMS

Brand coverage KPI

A Number card counting active overrides answers the agency question: was this client install actually branded after handover, or did White Label CMS get installed and forgotten.

Per-role parity

Per-role coverage bar surfaces whether Editor and Subscriber screens look as polished as the Administrator's. Gaps appear as shorter bars ready for a final-mile fix.

Category split

Donut of overrides across Login, Dashboard, Admin Bar, Menus, and Footer makes branding completeness visible at a glance. The category with the smallest slice is the next thing to finish.

Audience

Where white-label charts change handovers

Agencies

Client handovers include the override count and per-category donut as proof of work. The dashboard URL replaces a static checklist that nobody reads twice.

Network operators

Multi-site dashboards spot installs where branding coverage drifted below the agency baseline. Short bars across the fleet become a queue of cleanup work.

Client success teams

QBRs include a branding-coverage screenshot. Clients see exactly which screens look like their brand and which still reveal WordPress underneath.

The bigger picture

Brand polish ships when it is measured

White Label CMS is the plugin agencies install when the goal is to make WP Admin disappear behind a client brand. Login logos, dashboard widgets, admin bar links, footer text, and per-role menus all become customizable. The trouble is that customizing all of them is tedious, and most installs end up with three tabs configured and the rest left at defaults.

The data is there in wlcms_options to know exactly which categories got branded and which did not. Without a chart, nobody checks. With a chart, the conversation changes.

A Number card for active overrides, a donut for category split, a bar for per-role coverage, and a bar for hidden default items all show the agency exactly how complete each install is. Sites where Subscriber screens still show the WordPress default surface as shorter bars. Categories nobody got around to surface as the smallest slice.

The plugin was always recording the truth; SleekView Charts is the layer that turns it into an evidence-based handover.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView Charts for White Label CMS

From the wlcms_options serialized array in wp_options, the same source the White Label CMS settings tabs read. SleekView Charts parses the option into a row-per-setting data structure for chart aggregation.

 

Yes. The category donut groups overrides across Login, Dashboard, Admin Bar, Menus, Footer, and Custom Code. The biggest slice is where the agency invested most effort; the smallest slice is the obvious next target.

 

Yes. White Label CMS writes per-role visibility into its options structure. SleekView Charts expands those into per-role rows so the coverage bar shows Editor, Subscriber, and Administrator independently.

 

Yes. SleekView Charts respects multisite scoping. Agency networks aggregate branding coverage across sites to spot installs that drifted below the standard, all from a single dashboard.

 

Yes. The point of the Number KPI is to surface partial configuration. Sites with three tabs filled in show a small number; sites with full coverage show a high number with no shorter role bars.

 

Yes. The category filter applies at the dashboard level. Pick Login or Dashboard and every chart reshapes to that area, useful for finishing one section at a time during cleanup.

 

Yes. SleekView Charts reads wlcms_options on every dashboard load. Save a branding change in White Label CMS and the KPI updates on the next refresh, with no sync delay.

 

Yes. Every chart's dataset is downloadable as CSV or JSON. Client handover packets include both the live dashboard URL and a flat artefact for archival.

 

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