To connect Twitter Analytics to Google Looker Studio (formerly Data Studio), go to Create report (or to the Looker Studio community connectors gallery), choose the Twitter Analytics integration by Porter Metrics, connect your Google account, connect your Twitter profiles, see the list of fields available, and generate a default report template to monitor your social media performance and automate your marketing reports.
June 2023 updates: Twitter announced it’d change its API pricing, from free to $5000/mo. As for today, we’re paying the basic plan and restricting the usage to a small number of customers. These changes impact only Twitter Analytics (aka organic), not Twitter Ads users.
By the end of the tutorial, you’ll know:
- 3 free and paid ways to connect Twitter Analytics to Looker Studio
- Customize your Twitter Analytics reports
- Available Twitter Analytics metrics and dimensions
- Custom Twitter Analytics metrics and dimensions
- Free Twitter Analytics Report templates for Google Looker Studio
Free and paid ways to connect Twitter Analytics to Looker Studio
You can connect Twitter Analytics to Looker Studio through a connector (suggested for this tutorial), or importing data first to a Google Sheet automatically or manually.
As an additional resource, learn to connect any data to Looker Studio, or, if you present any problems during the setup, go to our troubleshooting guide.
Twitter Analytics connector for Looker Studio
The advantage of using a direct connector is that you can create charts by freely combining metrics and dimensions, without managing queries or Sheets in between, making it faster and easier to build reports.
In a nutshell, follow these steps when using a Twitter Analytics connector for Looker Studio.
Go to the Porter Metrics onboarding or the Google Looker Studio connectors gallery and choose the Twitter Analytics connector (by Porter).
Connect the same Google account you’re using on Google Looker Studio.
Click on Authorize to connect Porter and Twitter.
Connect the Twitter profile with access to your Twitter accounts. It doesn’t need to be the same one as the one from Google.
Optionally, connect other Twitter profiles to connect Twitter Analytics accounts your profile doesn’t have permissions for.
Close the authentication popup and go back to Looker Studio.
Choose the Twitter profiles to bring on the report and click on Connect.
See the fields and go to Create report.
Download our free Twitter Analytics report template for Looker Studio, and start a 14-day free trial:
Importing Twitter Analytics data on Google Sheets
The advantage of using Google Sheets as integration is instant load time when querying small amounts of data, and guaranteed stability, as you’re using Google’s native integrations.
With Sheets, also, you can edit your data. For instance, you could set goals, agency markups or commissions.
As a downside, connecting to Google Sheets first hinders the use of templates and removes data granularity (i.e. freely combining metrics and dimensions when creating charts).
Use the Porter Metrics Google Sheets add-on to automatically import your Twitter Analytics data on a Google Sheet to later connect that Google Sheet to a Looker Studio report.
Uploading a CSV file
As a free option, manually download your Twitter Analytics data as a CSV file and import it on a Google Sheet, but:
- Data won’t refresh and update automatically
- Up to100 uploads
- Max 100MB per CSV
- All CSV files structure must be identical
Customize your Twitter Analytics reports
To continue with the report setup, you can add a new page on the report template just downloaded, or create a new report from scratch, and go to the Edit view.
If you opt to create a new report, here’s how to connect again your data on Looker Studio.
Adding charts
Add scorecards, time series, tables, pie charts, and more chart types to visualize your data.
Scorecards
Scorecards are the most simple way to display your data, by only showing a metric.
Go to Insert, choose a scorecard, and paste it in the canvas.
We’ll use User followers Count as the metric that corresponds to the number of followers of a Twitter account.
Create 2 more scorecards by repeating the process or copy-pasting the original scorecard.
Optionally, use Users tweet count, Tweet engagements, or +50 fields available on the Twitter API.
Time series
Time series charts are useful to visualize trends over time.
Go to Insert – Time series.
Use date as date dimension. Use Tweet engagements as the metric.
Optionally, use other date dimensions like month, week, day of week.
Tables
Tables are the most flexible and complete way to visualize data, letting you add as many metrics and dimensions as you want.
Go to Insert – Table.
Use Tweet text and Tweet image as dimension; Use Tweet engagements, Tweet replies, Tweet quotes, Tweet likes as the metrics.
Bar charts, pie charts, and maps
Both bar charts and pie charts let you visualize your data by breakdowns. Bar charts are better for cardinal and ordinal data; pie charts are better for nominal data.
Go to Insert – Pie chart.
- For the bar chart, use Hashtags as the dimension.
- For the pie chart, use Media type as the dimension.
As metrics use the Tweet-related metrics (e.g. Retweets, quotes, likes, etc.).
Comparisons
Add goals, reference lines, or conditional formats to compare your data and add context.
Comparison date range
Select the scorecards and set Previous Period as the comparison date range.
Reference lines
Select the time series Go to Style – Add a Reference line, choose Metric as type, and Average, as aggregation.
Conditional formatting
Select the time series Go to Style – Conditional formatting, choose Color scale and any metric.
Adding controls
Use dropdowns, search bars, data range controls, or parameters to make your reports interactive by applying filters. Learn more about controls.
Date range controls
Go to Add a control – Dropdown. Choose Date range control to visualize your marketing data daily, weekly, monthly, etc.
Dropdowns
Go to Add a control – Dropdown. Choose Tweet text or Username as the dimension to filter data by Tweet or Twitter account.
Design
To influence your team or clients, design and white-label your marketing dashboards. Also, follow our recommendations on designing marketing reports.
Shapes
Use rectangles or circles to draw sections or headers. Right-click the rectangle – Order – Send to back.
Text
Use text to add headers, chart titles, or complementary analysis or comments to your charts.
Go to Text on the Looker Studio menu and paste it in the header of the report. Customize the font family and size.
Colors
Customize the colors of every single chart.
Select the scorecard and go to Style. Change the value size, colors, backgrounds, and borders.
Optionally, select and copy a chart, and copy-paste its style in another chart with right-click – paste special – Paste style only.
Logo
Change the current logo or add your own by choosing Image and uploading a PNG file.
Theme and layout
Change your report’s canvas size, navigation menu, background colors, and default charts’ style.
To customize the theme, go to Theme and Layout – Theme. Choose one of the default templates or customize it.
To customize the layout, go to Theme and Layout – Layout.
- View mode: set the header visibility to Initially hidden; set the navigation type to the left; and set the mode to fit to width and remove the margin to make your report mobile-friendly.
- Canvas size: we’d suggest 1024×768 for a slide view, or 900×1200 for a vertical view.
Navigation
You can create multiple pages for your report, divide them by sections, and add icons.
Go to Page – New page. On Page settings, you can do any customization at a page level, without impacting the whole report.
Share
Share your Google Looker Studio reports with an audience through permissions, links, embeds, PDF, or email schedules.
Permissions
Grant editor or viewer permissions to users with Google accounts within or outside your company.
Schedule delivery
To schedule an automatic report delivery, go to Share – Schedule delivery.
Set the subject, recipients, pages, filters, start date, and frequency to send your reports via email.
Download PDF
Download a PDF version of your reports and, optionally, exclude pages.
We encourage you to take our Google Looker Studio tutorial for marketers and learn to present your marketing reports.
Twitter Analytics metrics and dimensions
As reference, see the Twitter Analytics fields list and suggestions for choosing Twitter Analytics KPIs.
The Twitter Analytics connector for Google Looker Studio offers all the +100 metrics and dimensions available on the Twitter Analytics API.
Twitter Analytics mainly include fields about video, Tweets, and user profile data, including:
- Tweets: URLs, mentions, hashtags, replies, retweets, likes, and clicks for both promoted and organic tweets..
- Media: media views at 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% for organic and promoted videos.
- Profile: username, followers, verification, profile image.
Custom Twitter Analytics metrics and dimensions
Often, you need to calculate your own metrics:
- You have a different way to calculate formulas
- Need to clean and filter data
- Need to combine from other data sources
To analyze Twitter Analytics data and get accurate marketing KPIs, customize metrics on your Looker Studio reports.
Custom metrics with calculated fields
With Google Looker Studio, you can create custom formulas like done on Sheets. With Twitter Analytics data, some popular use cases include calculating your own:
- Engagement rate
- Total engagements
- Average engagement per followers
- Total number of posts
Custom dimensions with REGEX
Regular Expressions (or REGEX) on Google Looker Studio let you create custom dimensions to tag or group your data in ways not available by default from the data sources.
Some popular use cases of REGEX for Twitter Analytics are grouping by content topic or hashtag.
Tag, group, or categorize social media content by topics/hashtags with Google Looker Studio (2023)
Clean your data with filters
Set filters at chart, page, or report level.
Select the scorecards (or any chart), go to Setup – Add a filter.
Name your filter, set to Include, Media type that CONTAINS “video”.
With this filter, you’ll visualize your performance only from video posts, not GIFS or images.
Blend data for cross-channel reporting
To fully visualize your funnel or calculate general marketing KPIs accurately, you may need to blend data on Looker Studio from ads, social media, CRM, e-commerce, or GA4.
You can blend Twitter Analytics data with other social media data sources such as Facebook Insights, TikTok, Twitter, or LinkedIn.
How to blend social media data on Google Looker Studio (2023)
Free Twitter Analytics report templates for Looker Studio
To download a Google Looker Studio report template, go to the report, click on the ellipsis icon in the top-right-corner, click on Make a copy, connect a new data source that matches the original data source, and Copy report.
Suggested: Twitter Analytics report templates for Looker Studio.