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

Koko Analytics Dashboard

Every Koko Analytics record, in a filterable, sortable, exportable table that turns the lightweight tracker into a real reporting tool. Pivot, segment, and build custom dashboards without leaving WordPress.

♾️ Lifetime License available

SleekView table view for Koko Analytics

Koko gives you data, not exploration

Koko Analytics is fast, privacy-first, cookieless, and famously lightweight. Its dashboard is a daily snapshot designed to load fast and tell you the basics. To explore your data, segment it, or build custom reports across multiple dimensions, you need a real table. Koko's tables are well-structured but the UI does not expose them.

SleekView reads wp_koko_analytics_pageviews and wp_koko_analytics_referrers directly. Every page view, with URL, page title, visitors, pageviews, top referrer, and date, becomes a row in a filterable table. Stack filters across URL pattern, referrer, and date range to build segments the chart UI cannot.

Save the resulting filter combination as a named report so weekly reviews become one-click loads instead of rebuilds. Export filtered data to CSV for BI tools, embed dashboards on internal pages with role-based access for non-admin teammates, and read straight from the Koko tables so the lightweight tracker stays lightweight.

Workflow

Turn Koko's lightweight tracker into a reporting tool

1

Connect Koko tables

Point SleekView at wp_koko_analytics_pageviews and wp_koko_analytics_referrers. Pro version event and goal columns are picked up automatically when the Pro add-on is active.
2

Build the report view

Surface URL, page title, visitors, pageviews, top referrer, and date. Add custom event columns from Koko Pro if you track goal completions or button clicks beyond pageviews.
3

Stack filters and save reports

Combine date range, URL pattern, and referrer to build queries the default chart cannot. Save each compound filter as a named preset and reload it weekly without rebuilding.
4

Embed and export

Drop the table on an internal dashboard page with role-based access for non-admin teammates. Export filtered data to CSV for downstream BI tools or weekly stakeholder reports.

Sample columns

Koko page views

Every page view Koko records, with URL, referrer, and date sortable and filterable.
Source: wp_koko_analytics_pageviews + wp_koko_analytics_referrers
URL Page Title Visitors Pageviews Top Referrer Date
/blog/wordpress-analytics Best WordPress Analytics Tools 412 489 google.com 2026-04-24
/pricing Pricing 208 247 (direct) 2026-04-24
/docs/install Installing Koko 94 118 github.com 2026-04-23
/ Home 612 743 (direct) 2026-04-23

Comparison

Koko default dashboard vs. SleekView

Koko default dashboard

  • Single chart per metric, no pivots
  • No multi-filter exploration
  • Limited CSV export
  • Cannot build saved custom reports
  • Hard to compare URLs side by side

SleekView

  • Pivot by URL, referrer, or date
  • Stack filters for true segmentation
  • Save custom reports as filter presets
  • Export filtered data to CSV in one click
  • Display a custom dashboard for your team

Features

What SleekView gives you for Koko Analytics

Stacked filters

Combine date range, URL pattern, and referrer to find the exact data you need. Compound queries like blog posts that gained traffic from Twitter last week become one-click reports.

Top URL reports

Sort by pageviews or unique visitors and surface your top content for the week. Filter to specific URL patterns like blog posts only, then sort by visitors to find what is actually working.

Privacy-respecting

Reads from Koko tables only, so no extra tracking, cookies, or data sharing happens. Koko's privacy-first guarantees stay completely intact through every SleekView view you build.

Audience

Where it fits

Content marketing

Filter to your blog and rank posts by visitors per day to find what is working. Surface the top ten posts for a weekly content review without leaving WP admin.

Referral tracking

Pivot by referrer to see which partners and campaigns send real traffic. Spot when a post starts getting referrals from a high-value source you should follow up with.

Internal dashboards

Show non-admin teammates the metrics that matter on a frontend page they can read. Marketing leads get their own dashboard URL with the report scoped to their KPIs.

The bigger picture

Why lightweight analytics still deserve real reports

Lightweight analytics plugins solve a real problem: most sites do not need the complexity of Google Analytics, the ingestion cost of Plausible, or the dashboard sprawl of Matomo. Koko hits a sweet spot: tiny script, no cookies, no tracking pixels, just the basics. The downside of being intentionally minimal is that exploring your own data is harder than it should be.

The dashboard is a snapshot, not a tool, and exporting raw data for a deeper look means custom queries against the tables. That is fine for the developer who installed Koko and never thinks about analytics again, but it is a problem for the marketer who needs to know which content drove last month's referral spike, or the SEO consultant who wants to track organic traffic patterns over a quarter. SleekView keeps Koko's lightness intact, since it only reads, and gives the people who actually use the analytics data a real reporting layer on top.

The plugin stays simple. The reports get serious.

Questions

Common questions about SleekView for Koko Analytics

Yes. Custom events and goals from the Pro version show up as new columns automatically. Goal completion data, custom event tracking, and additional dimensions Pro tracks all become column options without any extra configuration. Upgrading from free to Pro does not require reconfiguring existing SleekView views, since the schema detection is automatic.

 

No. SleekView reads in pages from Koko tables and never blocks writes. Koko's ingestion path runs on its own queries, fully independent of any reporting view you build. Even with multiple analysts running heavy filter queries simultaneously, the lightweight tracking script stays fast because the read and write paths never contend for the same locks.

 

Yes. Drop multiple SleekView tables on a single dashboard page, each with its own filters and columns. A marketing dashboard might combine top blog posts, top referrers, and goal completions on one page. Each table runs its own filters and refreshes independently, so the dashboard becomes a layered report rather than a single view.

 

Yes. Use absolute or relative ranges including last 7 days, this month, and quarter to date. Compare-to-previous-period filtering lets you spot week-over-week and month-over-month trends without manually subtracting numbers. Bookmark a URL with the date range encoded and the report loads with the same range every time.

 

Yes. Embed on a frontend page and gate by role to keep WP admin out of the picture. Marketing teammates log in via a custom login page, get a dashboard scoped to their role, and never need wp-admin access. Role-based column visibility hides any internal fields you do not want non-admins to see.

 

It is indexed-read efficient and works comfortably with millions of rows when scoped to a date range. For high-traffic sites with hundreds of thousands of pageviews per day, default views scoped to the last 30 days remain responsive. For full-history reports, expect filter changes to take a few seconds rather than instant, which is fine for analyst-driven exploration.

 

Yes. Match the URL column against WP post permalinks and add author, category, or publish date as columns. This turns the Koko view into a content performance dashboard where editors see traffic alongside the posts they wrote. Useful for editorial teams running content audits to find underperforming posts that need a refresh or a retire decision.

 

No, it complements it. The Koko dashboard is great for daily snapshots and basic charts the whole team can glance at. SleekView is for analysts and marketers who need to slice and dice the same data with compound filters and saved reports. Most teams keep both: Koko for the at-a-glance view, SleekView for the question-answering view when the chart raises a question.

 

Pricing

More than 1000+
happy customers

Explore our flexible licensing options tailored to your needs. Upgrade your license anytime to access more features, or opt for a lifetime license for ongoing value, including lifetime updates and lifetime support. Our hassle-free upgrade process ensures that our platform can grow with you, starting from whichever plan you choose.

Starter

€79

EUR

per year

  • 3 websites
  • 1 year of updates
  • 1 year of support

Pro

€149

EUR

per year

  • Unlimited websites
  • 1 year of updates
  • 1 year of support

Lifetime ♾️

Most popular

€249

EUR

once

  • Unlimited websites
  • Lifetime updates
  • Lifetime support

...or get the Bundle Deal
and save €250 🎁

The Bundle (unlimited sites)

Pay once, own it forever

Elevate your WordPress site with our exclusive plugin bundle that includes all of our premium plugins in one package. Enjoy lifetime updates and lifetime support. Save significantly compared to buying plugins individually.

What’s included

  • SleekAI

  • SleekByte

  • SleekMotion

  • SleekPixel

  • SleekRank

  • SleekView