Real Advertising dashboard example

Get the actual Advertising dashboard example used by Porter to monitor your PPC performance.

Meet the author

Porter

This template is built by the same marketers behind all our tutorials, support, and our template gallery.

+40,000 marketers have downloaded our dashboards

Template setup

Copy-paste the same dashboards that other teams and agencies use to monitor their PPC performance

Advertising dashboard example overview

With this Advertising dashboard example, you can monitor specific metrics to effectively track the performance of your campaigns. For instance, you can analyze click-through rates, conversion rates, and cost per acquisition to optimize your advertising strategies. Additionally, the dashboard allows you to segment the data by demographics, geographical locations, or device types, providing valuable insights for targeted marketing efforts. To influence teams or clients, you can easily share the dashboard findings as a PDF report, a shareable link, or via email. This enables you to present a cohesive overview of the advertising performance, making it simpler to align stakeholders and collaborate on improvements. Furthermore, this dashboard example provides answers to crucial questions. You can examine which ad channels yield the highest return on investment, evaluate the effectiveness of different ad creatives, and identify the most profitable customer segments. By leveraging these insights, you can make data-driven decisions to optimize your advertising campaigns for maximum impact.

Metrics and dimensions included

Customize the template’s metrics and dimensions as you like. See all available fields.

Metrics

Conversion metrics

– Click-through rate (CTR) – Conversion rate – Cost per acquisition (CPA)

Engagement metrics

– Click-through rate (CTR) – Conversion rate – Social media engagement rate

Visibility metrics

– Impressions – Reach – Click-through Rate (CTR)

Dimensions

Campaign

– Advertising: – Demographics – Psychographics – Geographics

Audience

– Demographic – Geographic – Psychographic

Time

By hour, day, week, month, quarter, or year

Features

100% custom charts

White-label

Custom metrics​

All-time historical data

Schedule email alerts​

Filters

Interactive

Goals​

Data blending

FAQs

An advertising report should include metrics such as visibility (impressions, reach), engagement (clicks, shares), and conversion metrics (conversions, ROI). This data should be segmented by campaign, channel, audience, content, objective, and date. For example, campaign A had 100,000 impressions, campaign B had 500 clicks, and campaign C achieved a conversion rate of 5%.
To analyze advertising data, consider the following steps: 1) Choose metrics to include in the report, such as visibility metrics (impressions, reach), engagement metrics (click-through rate, likes), and conversion metrics (conversion rate, ROI). 2) Add context by comparing these metrics against the cost of the advertising campaign, date range of the data, goals set for the campaign, industry rates, and benchmarks. For example, compare the impressions per dollar spent to average industry rates to assess cost-effectiveness. 3) Segment the data by campaign, channel, audience, content, objective, and date to provide a comprehensive view. For instance, compare the engagement metrics of different campaigns or channels to identify top-performing ones. Example: In reviewing the advertising data, we found that Campaign A had a higher visibility metric with 100,000 impressions compared to Campaign B’s 80,000 impressions. However, the engagement metric revealed that Campaign B had a higher click-through rate of 5% compared to Campaign A’s 3%. By segmenting the data by campaign, we can assess the effectiveness of each campaign’s content and the corresponding engagement metrics.
To build an advertising dashboard, 1) connect your data and accounts from platforms like Google Ads or Facebook Ads. 2) Select the metrics to monitor performance such as click-through rates, cost per click, and conversion rates. 3) Segment or break down data by campaign, channel, audience, product, customer content, objective, date. For example, you can compare the performance of a summer sale campaign on Facebook versus Google. 4) Add filters or buttons to make your report interactive, allowing users to view specific date ranges or campaigns. 5) Share your dashboard via PDF, scheduled emails, or links to relevant stakeholders.
An advertising dashboard is a visual tool that displays key advertising metrics and KPIs, enabling businesses to track and measure the performance of their advertising campaigns in real-time. It is significant for businesses as it aids in making data-driven decisions, optimizing ad spend, and improving ROI. Tools like Looker Studio are commonly used to create these dashboards, which typically include elements like click-through rates, conversion rates, cost per click, and impressions. Real-time data monitoring is crucial as it allows for immediate adjustments and improvements. For a detailed guide on creating a marketing dashboard using Looker Studio, visit our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@porter.metrics.

Yes, Looker Studio allows you to download your report as a PDF. To do it, follow these steps:

Before downloading your report choose the date range you want to visualize on your report.
Click on the “File” menu at the top left corner of the screen.

Select “Download as” from the drop-down menu and choose “PDF.”

You can choose which pages you want to download, and also you can add a password to protect the report and add a link back to the online report.

Click on “Download” to save the report on your device.