SleekView Charts for Writesonic for WordPress
SleekView Charts reads the posts Writesonic writes into WordPress and the template and tone meta it stamps, then renders generation volume and mix as Number, Pie, Bar and Area cards while the model calls themselves stay in the Writesonic cloud.
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Writesonic runs the prompt. WordPress holds the post.
Writesonic for WordPress hands the prompt and the chosen template to Writesonic's cloud. When the writer accepts the output, the post body, status, author and a template/tone label land in WordPress as meta. The cloud owns the model and the credit ledger. WordPress owns the artifact.
SleekView Charts reads those rows directly. A Number card counts Writesonic-stamped posts. A Pie splits by template. A Bar groups by author. An Area trends generations per week. Cloud generations stay with Writesonic; the dashboard reflects what landed in WP.
The chart view and the table view share the same dataset, so filters carry across. Filter to a single template in the chart view and the audit table narrows the same way. Exports come from the filtered rows.
Workflow
Turn Writesonic posts and meta into a dashboard
Pick the source post type
Compose the chart cards
Save and scope the dashboard
Share or export
Sample dashboard
Charts you can build from Writesonic WP data
Writesonic posts total
Count
Template mix
Count
group by _writesonic_template
Posts per author
Count
group by post_author
Generations per week
Count
group by post_date
Comparison
Default Writesonic reporting vs SleekView Charts
Default Writesonic usage screen
- Writesonic's usage page lives in its cloud, not in WP
- No native pivot of template mix across the WordPress archive
- No per-author trend chart inside WP for editorial reviews
- No way to combine template mix with post_status in one chart
- Read-only sharing outside the WP admin is not part of the plugin
SleekView Charts
- KPI for Writesonic-stamped posts across the site
- Pie split by template to see which formats dominate
- Bar of posts per author for editorial accountability
- Area trend of generations per week for cadence reviews
- Filters carry between chart and table views on the same dataset
Features
What SleekView Charts gives you for Writesonic for WordPress
Template mix as a chart
Render Writesonic's template meta as a Pie or Bar so the share of templates is visible at a glance instead of buried in a per-row column.
Filters span chart and table
Filter to a single template in the chart view and the audit table follows. One dataset, two surfaces, no double-bookkeeping.
Read-only share and export
Send a URL of the dashboard to a stakeholder or export the filtered rows to CSV. Reviews stay grounded in numbers.
Audience
Who builds Writesonic charts dashboards with SleekView
Editorial leads
Watch Writesonic posts per template and per author in one dashboard, then plan adoption coaching against a real number.
Content ops
Group Writesonic posts per author and per week to balance handoffs and to flag templates the team is not using.
Finance
Use template mix and weekly cadence to brief budget conversations with the actual format mix in play, not vibes.
The bigger picture
Why Writesonic adoption needs a template dashboard
Writesonic's strength is its template library, so the interesting question is rarely "how many" but "which templates". A flat Posts list cannot answer that. A KPI of total Writesonic posts makes volume visible.
A pie of templates shows whether the team has converged on a handful of formats or is exploring the wider library. A bar per author exposes adoption patterns. A weekly area trend tells a quarterly review whether use is sticking.
Same posts, same meta, very different operating conversation.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView Charts for Writesonic for WordPress
Only WordPress data: the posts Writesonic for WordPress writes and the template and tone meta it stamps, plus standard wp_posts columns. Writesonic's own usage logs live in its cloud and are not pulled by SleekView.
 No. SleekView never calls Writesonic's backend. It reads what the WordPress plugin has already written to your database. Anything that never reached WP cannot appear on the dashboard.
 Yes, as long as the WordPress plugin stores the template in postmeta. Group a Pie or Bar card by that meta key to see which formats the team actually relies on.
 Yes. Group by post_date with an Area or Line card and pick a Count aggregation to see Writesonic posts per day, week or month.
 Yes. The meta is written at creation, so drafts, pending and published posts all appear. Filter on post_status to focus on the stage that matters.
 Yes. Add a filter for post_author and every card narrows. Useful for one-on-one reviews focused on adoption patterns.
 Yes. Any filtered set behind a chart card exports as CSV. Editorial leads use it for quarterly briefings; ops uses it before adoption coaching sessions.
 They count different things. Writesonic's cloud counts every generation, whether accepted or discarded. SleekView counts what landed in WordPress. The two are useful next to each other, not as the same KPI.
 Pricing
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