A white-label admin isn’t only about looks. It’s about focus. Use the Menu Builder and Dashboard so the client sees only the items and widgets that matter to them, in an order that makes sense.
1. Open Menu Builder
Go to Menu Builder & Navigation (or the equivalent in your FleekDash setup).
You’ll manage the sidebar menu: which items appear, in what order, and (if supported) any grouping or labels.
2. Build the client-facing menu
Remove or hide items the client doesn’t need (e.g. developer tools, plugin lists, or internal-only sections).
Reorder items so the most important (e.g. Dashboard, Posts, Media, their custom post types) are at the top.
Rename labels if it helps (e.g. “Content” instead of “Posts”) so the language matches the client’s world.
If your build supports groups or categories, use them to keep the menu scannable (e.g. “Content”, “Settings”).
Save. The sidebar the client sees should now reflect their workflow, not a generic WordPress list.
3. Configure the Dashboard
Open the Dashboard.
Add or remove widgets so the client sees what’s useful: e.g. at-a-glance stats, recent posts, pending comments, or growth/sales widgets if they use those features.
Arrange widgets (drag-and-drop if available) so the most important information is above the fold.
Avoid cluttering the dashboard with internal or technical widgets the client doesn’t need.
4. Optional: Window Manager habits
If the client will work with multiple areas (e.g. list + editor + media), briefly check Window Manager behavior (tabs/panels) so you can mention it in handover (“You can open several sections in tabs”).
Result
The client’s sidebar and dashboard are focused and relevant. In Step 5 we’ll set up roles and a client user so they have the right permissions and a clean first login.