Up to 3 Metrics, One Chart
Any combination of business metrics plotted together. Enough to reveal patterns, not so many that the chart becomes noise.
TRENDS
Overlay up to 3 business metrics on one chart. Pre-built presets surface the relationships most brands need to see. The useful findings live where metrics diverge, not where they agree.
Revenue is up. Ad spend is up. AOV is flat. Customer count is growing. Individually, these numbers tell a story. But you're missing the story they tell together. When two metrics that should move together start diverging, that's where the real question lives. You just don't see it because each metric lives in its own tab, its own report, its own tool.
Trends plots up to 3 metrics on a single chart with independent Y-axes. You pick the metrics, or start with a preset combination designed to surface the relationships that matter most. The chart adjusts to daily, weekly, or monthly time grouping, and each metric gets its own color so you can trace its path clearly.
Pre-built presets give you a starting point: sales alongside AOV alongside customer count, or ad spend alongside new customers alongside ROAS. Start there, then swap metrics in and out. Compare three, replace one, compare three more. Build up a picture of how your business actually behaves over time, not how you assumed it would.
Any combination of business metrics plotted together. Enough to reveal patterns, not so many that the chart becomes noise.
Curated metric combinations that surface the relationships most brands need to see first.
Replace one metric at a time to test different hypotheses. Build understanding incrementally.
Each metric scales to its own range. Ad spend in dollars and conversion rate in percentages can share the same chart without distortion.
Daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly, or yearly. Zoom in for recent anomalies or zoom out for structural trends.
Your selected metrics are saved between sessions. Come back tomorrow and the same view is waiting.
Two metrics rising together is expected. One rising while the other falls or stays flat is a question worth asking. Start with a preset. Watch for the moment the lines diverge. That's where the useful finding lives. If ad spend rises but new customer count stays flat, your efficiency dropped. If revenue rises but AOV drops, you're selling more units at lower prices. The chart surfaces these relationships in seconds.
If revenue is flat but you feel like things should be better, plot revenue alongside AOV and customer count. One of those two will explain why. The answer is different from what most people assume.
"I think our ad efficiency dropped last month." Plot ad spend, new customers, and CPA together. If CPA spiked while new customers didn't grow, you've confirmed it with data. If CPA held steady, the problem is somewhere else.
A metric that suddenly deviates from its normal relationship with another metric is an early warning. The Trends chart surfaces this the day it happens, not in the monthly review.
When your team debates whether to increase ad spend, put the relevant metrics on one chart. The conversation shifts from opinions to observable patterns.
Three is the maximum because more metrics on one chart makes patterns invisible. You can run as many comparisons as you want by swapping metrics in and out. Presets make switching fast.
Start with a preset. They're curated combinations that reveal the most common and most useful relationships. Once you see how those move together, you'll know what to customize.
It depends on your business rhythm. Daily if you run active ad campaigns. Weekly if you want to catch trends early. Monthly if you're reviewing overall performance. The time grouping controls let you adjust the view to match.
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