

You might use pages to drill-down in your data, starting with an overall summary sheet and then going into more specific details in subsequent sheets. They’re useful and simple to implement in Data Studio. Pages allow you to display multiple dashboard reports in a single Data Studio report. In this post I’m going to dive a little deeper into the tool and look at 6 techniques to master for creating dashboard reports using this tool: 6 advanced tips for working with Google Data Studio

I wrote an introduction to the tool earlier this year, so that’s a good place to start if you want to find out more about it. It’s only in beta version at the moment and new features and customization options get added pretty rapidly, so it will be interesting to see where Google take this product. Here are two example reports for a mid-size website (~500k pageviews a month).Īnd second, a social media referral dashboard: It’s a great option for small/medium businesses already using Google tools, who want to build bespoke dashboards for that 40,000ft view of their business. It’s a really smart reporting tool for quickly creating powerful, stunning dashboards from multiple Google data sources.

Google launched a new business intelligence tool called Data Studio in May 2016.
