SleekView Charts for WP-Property
WP-Property piles MLS, RETS, and custom fields onto each property post but reports almost none of them. SleekView Charts reads the property CPT and renders office dashboards with KPI tiles, status donuts, agent bars, and listing trends.
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Office inventory math, on one screen
WP-Property uses a single property custom post type and piles up dozens of meta fields: MLS ID, RETS-imported fields, beds, baths, square footage, price, status, school district, lot size, days-on-market, plus any agency-specific tags. The schema is flexible, but the WordPress admin shows almost none of it on the list view. Brokers either click into each property to see the detail or export to spreadsheets to compute office-wide reads.
SleekView Charts reads the property CPT and pivots the postmeta into chart cards. A Number card surfaces total active inventory. A Pie card breaks listings down by status (Active, Pending, Sold, Withdrawn). A Bar card ranks agents by listing count. An Area card plots new listings per week. Brokers, marketing teams, and office managers each see the dashboard that matches their role.
The dashboard refreshes on save, so inline price reductions or status flips made through the SleekView table view immediately change the chart. Saved dashboards per office, per agent, or per portfolio handle the visibility scope without remapping configurations. The data stays in WordPress; the math stays where the data lives.
Workflow
From property CPT to a real estate dashboard
Connect the property CPT
Pin office KPIs
Add status and agent breakdowns
Plot growth and segmentation
post_date for new listings per week. Bar on rounded price buckets for the office price-range distribution. Marketing and management read growth and segmentation together.
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from WP-Property data
Active listings
Count
Status mix
Count
group by property_status
Listings by agent
Count
group by agent
New listings per week
Count
group by post_date
Comparison
Default WP-Property reporting vs SleekView Charts
Default WP-Property admin
- No reporting dashboard for inventory or office performance
- Status counts only after manual filter clicks on the property list
- Price-range segmentation requires a custom query or CSV export
- Days-on-market trend never computed in the admin
- Per-agent and per-office breakdowns happen in spreadsheets
SleekView Charts
- KPI tiles for active, pending, and sold listings
- Status donut for inventory balance and conversion
- Agent bar ranking team members by inventory carried
- Price-bucket bar for office segmentation
- Area cards for listings, price reductions, and sales over time
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for WP-Property
Office KPIs from postmeta
Active, pending, and sold counts as Number cards. Office managers stop building weekly spreadsheets to answer the same questions about inventory size and pipeline health.
Status and agent breakdowns
Pie for status mix, Bar for agent load, Bar for price-bucket segmentation. The dashboard describes inventory shape, team workload, and price coverage on one screen.
Real estate trends
Area for new listings per week, optional Line for average days-on-market. RETS feed cycles, marketing pushes, and seasonal shifts each show up as identifiable patterns on the chart.
Audience
Who builds WP-Property charts dashboards with SleekView
Office managers
One dashboard per office with active listings, status mix, and agent load. Cross-office comparisons fit on one screen for the principal or the regional manager.
Brokers
Office-wide pipeline with price segmentation, source-mix bars, and weekly volume. The weekly broker meeting reads the dashboard directly instead of cycling through filtered list views.
Agents
Per-agent dashboards scoped to their own assigned listings. Their inventory by status, new listings this week, and days-on-market on one screen for daily triage.
The bigger picture
Why real estate teams need a charts layer
Real estate is a tabular business with reporting needs the WordPress admin cannot meet. Brokers compare listings against listings, managers run weekly reports on price reductions and days on market, marketing teams attribute campaigns to listing volume. Every input for that work sits in WP-Property's property CPT and its postmeta, but the default admin renders the data one row at a time and the question of how the office is performing requires custom SQL or spreadsheet exports.
The result is data freshness problems, broken audit trails, and team time spent producing reports instead of moving inventory. A charts layer that reads the same property CPT the SleekView table view reads, and turns the rows into KPI tiles, status donuts, agent bars, and weekly volume trends, makes office reporting a passive output of WordPress. RETS feeds stay on the RETS side.
Front-end search stays on the front end. The dashboard reads the data already present.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for WP-Property
Yes. SleekView Charts talks to standard post and meta APIs, not internal WP-Property functions. The active forks of WP-Property all preserve the property CPT and the postmeta layout, so the dashboard works across them with no special configuration.
 Yes. Any postmeta key, including RETS-imported fields and MLS IDs, becomes a groupable column for Bar, Pie, or Number cards. Useful for tracking RETS feed health and identifying gaps between imported and manual listings.
 Yes. Per-user row scoping uses post author or a custom assignment meta key. Co-listed properties with multiple assigned agents appear in both agents' dashboards without duplicating the underlying record.
 Build a Bar card grouped on rounded price buckets (under 250k, 250k to 500k, 500k to 1M, 1M to 2M, over 2M). The chart describes office price coverage in one read, useful for spotting under-served price bands.
 Photos are not rendered on chart cards. The dashboard aggregates numeric values, status counts, and date groupings, none of which load image data. Dashboards stay fast regardless of how many listings carry photos.
 Yes, from the SleekView table view that feeds the dashboard. Bulk-update changes flow through standard post APIs, so any plugin listening for status changes fires correctly and the next chart render reflects the new counts.
 Yes. Any taxonomy term on the property post drives filters and groupings. Houses, Condos, Lofts, and any custom property type appear automatically as Bar or Pie categories the next time the dashboard refreshes.
 
Days-on-market is derived from post_date and current status. The aggregation runs at query time so the chart always reflects the latest value. Useful for spotting stale stock at the office level and driving price-reduction workflows.
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