One screen that pulls every number that matters about your business — from all your tools — into a single, living dashboard. The numbers update themselves. You just read the game.
A reporting tool with a serious engine and a playful face.
Your growth data normally lives scattered across a handful of platforms — your email tool, your CRM, social, web analytics. The Reporter connects to all of them, pulls the key figures automatically every few hours, and shows them as one arcade cabinet: subscribers are the score, revenue is the hi-score, each metric an invader on the screen. Underneath the fun it's rigorous — every figure is real, dated, and traceable back to its source.
Four steps, then it runs itself.
Plugged into your tools once — email, CRM, social, web.
It fetches the latest numbers on its own, every few hours.
Live figures, trends, and how you're pacing to your goals.
One click for a clean PDF or Markdown report to share.
Each source is an invader on the screen. Green = live now, grey = designed-in, lighting up as it's connected.
List size, open & click rates, net growth per month, the number of audiences, and the full history of every campaign ever sent — date, audience, opens, clicks.
Money collected from live trainings, number of paying members, people on payment plans, registered-but-unpaid, and total contacts in the CRM — with a month-by-month revenue trend.
Followers, reach and engagement across Instagram, Facebook and LinkedIn — and which posts actually land.
Site sessions, where visitors come from, search visibility, and how many convert to a free intro.
Which specific campaign, channel or source drove each sign-up and each sale — organic vs MetaFest vs newsletter, etc.
Video-course and streaming buyers, and continuity — who keeps going and where people drop off.
The words behind the numbers — why people bought, why they didn't, what they're really after.
Spend, cost per lead, cost per sale and return on ad spend — switched on only if and when there's paid activity.
The raw numbers are just the start. Put together, they tell you things no single tool can.
Not just where you are, but which way you're moving — every figure vs last period, and whether you're on track to hit your target (e.g. 80 → 160 free-intro sign-ups).
From free intro → paying member: the true conversion rate, and which of the three doors (Awakening, Performer's Edge, Deep Healing) actually converts.
Tie every sign-up and sale back to its source, so you see which channel or campaign earns its keep — where the next hour and euro should go.
Lay survey themes next to the metrics: the quant tells you what changed, the voice tells you why — the part most dashboards never capture.
Spot where people quietly drop — the streaming continuity leak, the levels that don't lead to the next — before it costs you a cohort.
First touch → sign-up → sale → repeat, stitched across tools, so you understand the path, not just isolated stats.
These deepen as each source connects — the more of the picture is plugged in, the more the Reporter can join the dots.
Why it earns its place on the wall.
Every number that matters, on one screen — no logging into five tools, no stitching spreadsheets.
It refreshes itself. Decisions in minutes, on today's reality — not a report someone builds by hand weeks later.
Every figure is dated and traceable to its source. No vanity metrics, no guesswork. No substance, no glory.
Momentum and anomalies surface a dropping click-rate or a stalling funnel while you can still act on it.
Measure → understand → act → repeat. The Reporter is the measure-and-understand half, made effortless.
The same data becomes a clean PDF or Markdown for the team or the board — sober, no neon, just the facts.
Click any number and it explodes to show what's underneath — its trend over time and exactly which source it came from. The headline is the glory; you blast through it to check there's substance behind it.
The Reporter only ever stores totals and rates — never personal data. Names and emails stay in the systems that own them. It reports on people without holding them.