SleekView for WP Maintenance Mode: subscribers and visit logs as tables
WP Maintenance Mode stores its configuration in wp_options under wpmm_settings and collects subscriber emails for launch notifications. SleekView exposes subscribers, visit logs, and active configuration as queryable tables instead of a single settings page.
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Subscribers and visits as a real table
WP Maintenance Mode keeps most of its state in wp_options under a single serialized wpmm_settings blob: the active flag, the splash content, the countdown, and the list of subscriber emails. Visit logs from the splash page are stored alongside the subscribers, with timestamps and IP entries. The default settings screen shows everything as form fields, which makes it awkward to triage a launch sign-up list or audit who hit the splash overnight.
SleekView reads the same wpmm_settings structure and exposes subscribers and visits as two first-class tables. Subscriber email, sign-up date, and source URL become sortable columns. Visit logs get a separate view with timestamp, IP, and referer. Filters surface subscribers from the last 24 hours, by source page, or by domain, so the marketing handover at launch is a CSV export rather than a manual copy paste.
Inline edits write back through the plugin's own settings update, so unsubscribes, tags, or notes survive a settings save. Bulk delete clears bot-only signups in one batch. The maintenance toggle itself remains a manual decision, but the grid makes it obvious when a launch wave hits and the splash needs to come down.
Workflow
Build the WP Maintenance Mode grid in four steps
Pick the source
wpmm_settings option key. Subscribers and visit logs are extracted into two related views.
Compose columns
Save and scope per role
Edit inline or bulk-clean
Sample columns
A typical WP Maintenance Mode subscriber view
wp_options (wpmm_settings.subscribers + wpmm_settings.visit_logs)
| Signed up | Source | Country | Status | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| alex@studio.co | Apr 24 | / | DE | Confirmed |
| ria@design.io | Apr 24 | /launch | FR | Confirmed |
| spam@temp.io | Apr 23 | / | RU | Suspect |
| tom@hello.dev | Apr 22 | /about | US | Bounced |
Comparison
Default WP Maintenance Mode admin vs SleekView
Default WP Maintenance Mode admin
- Settings screen shows subscribers as a single form field
- No sortable list of subscribers by date
- Visit log is hidden in the settings tab
- No bulk delete for suspected bot sign-ups
- Cannot export filtered subscriber subsets
SleekView
-
Subscribers as a real grid sourced from
wpmm_settings - Filter by sign-up date, source URL, or country
- Separate view for visit logs with timestamp and referer
- Bulk delete suspected spam sign-ups in one action
- CSV export filtered subscribers for handover to email tools
Features
What SleekView gives you for WP Maintenance Mode
Subscriber grid
Pull subscribers out of the wpmm_settings blob into a real table with email, sign-up date, and source URL columns. Marketing finally sees the launch list without copy-pasting from a textarea.
Visit log view
A sibling view exposes the splash visit log with timestamp, IP, and referer, so traffic during a maintenance window is observable instead of guessed at.
Spam filter
Filter subscribers by country or email domain to spot bot sign-ups. Bulk delete clears them in one batch before the launch broadcast goes out.
Audience
Who uses SleekView for WP Maintenance Mode
Marketing leads
Export confirmed subscribers to an email tool the moment the splash comes down. Filters by source page show which launch channel drove the strongest sign-ups.
Site admins
Watch the visit log during planned downtime to know when traffic resumes. Bulk-delete known bot sources so the subscriber list stays human.
Growth analysts
Slice sign-ups by source URL and date to compare paid and organic campaigns driving traffic to the splash page during the pre-launch window.
The bigger picture
Why WP Maintenance Mode grids change operations
WP Maintenance Mode is a small plugin doing a big job during the most visible moments of a site's life, launch, redesign, or planned downtime. Its settings page treats the subscriber list and visit log as form fields, which is fine for a handful of entries but fails the moment a real campaign drives sign-ups. SleekView reads the same wpmm_settings structure and exposes subscribers and visits as queryable tables.
Marketing finally has a list it can filter by date, source page, and country, then export to whichever email tool the brand uses. Site admins keep an eye on the visit log to know when traffic resumes after maintenance and when the splash should come down. Spam triage moves from a textarea into a real grid, where suspect sign-ups get bulk deleted before the launch broadcast goes out.
None of this changes how the plugin works, the toggle and the splash stay exactly where they belong. SleekView simply unlocks the data the plugin already collects.
Questions
Common questions about SleekView for WP Maintenance Mode
Inside the serialized wpmm_settings option under the subscribers key. SleekView reads that array and turns each entry into a row with email, date, and source URL columns.
Yes. CSV export ships the visible columns including email and sign-up date. Marketing imports the file into Mailchimp, Klaviyo, or any tool that takes a CSV, no copy paste from a settings textarea.
 No. The toggle is a deliberate operator action and stays where the plugin puts it. SleekView focuses on visibility into who signed up and who hit the splash.
 
Yes. The visit log key inside wpmm_settings appears as a sibling view, with timestamp, IP, and referer columns and date-range filters.
Yes. SleekView writes the modified subscriber list back through the plugin's own update flow, so the settings screen sees the same data on the next load.
 You can add a notes column that stores per-subscriber annotations alongside the email. The notes are kept in the same option key so the data is portable with the rest of the maintenance settings.
 
Yes. Each site stores its own wpmm_settings option, so the grid is scoped to the current site automatically. Network admins switch sites to compare lists.
Yes. A subscriber email export through SleekView gives compliance an auditable CSV that satisfies subject-access requests scoped to the launch sign-up list.
 Pricing
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