Every RevOps team has dashboards. Most of them are unused. They were built with good intentions, loaded with metrics, and abandoned within a month. Here's how to build ones that stick.
Principle 1: Answer a question, not display data
The most common dashboard mistake is starting with "what data do we have?" instead of "what question needs answering?" A dashboard with 15 charts answers zero questions. A dashboard with 3 charts that answer "are we going to hit our number this quarter?" is worth more than any data warehouse visualization.
Before building any dashboard, write down the specific question it answers. If you can't articulate the question in one sentence, the dashboard will be unfocused.
Principle 2: Make the next action obvious
A good dashboard doesn't just show a number — it tells you what to do about it. Pipeline coverage is at 2.1x instead of the target 3x? The dashboard should show which stages are thin and which reps need to generate more pipeline. Red/yellow/green indicators are a start, but the drill-down path matters more.
If someone looks at your dashboard and says "interesting" but doesn't change their behavior, the dashboard failed.
Principle 3: Update without effort
Dashboards that require manual data entry die. Dashboards that pull from live integrations survive. Every metric on your dashboard should refresh automatically from your CRM, PSA, or operating platform. The moment someone has to paste numbers into a spreadsheet to update a dashboard, you've created a maintenance burden that won't last.
The three dashboards every RevOps team needs
Pipeline health: Coverage ratio, velocity by stage, new pipeline created vs. target, aging deals. Updated daily.
Forecast accuracy: Current forecast vs. AI prediction vs. historical conversion rates. Updated weekly.
Team performance: Activity metrics, conversion rates by rep, quota attainment trending. Updated weekly.
That's it. Three dashboards, three questions, three cadences. Everything else is noise until these three are working.