Weekly Sales Report Dashboard

Replace the weekly sales report spreadsheet with a dashboard that is faster to refresh and easier to share.

A weekly sales report is one of the clearest dashboard use cases: the structure stays mostly the same, but the data changes every cycle. Panely helps teams turn weekly exports into a repeatable sales dashboard without rebuilding charts and commentary blocks from scratch.

Built for operators who start with exports and need stakeholder-ready dashboards without BI setup.

Where the current workflow breaks

  • Weekly sales reports are often the same spreadsheet rebuilt again and again
  • Different exports have to be combined before the reporting view makes sense
  • Stakeholders want trends and deltas, not raw order files
  • A recurring report should not require repeated formatting work

What teams build with Panely

  • Weekly ecommerce revenue reviews
  • Small business sales snapshots for founders
  • Agency and operator reporting for client accounts
  • Monday KPI updates from exported sales data

How it works

  1. Step 1

    Export the sales data you review each week.

  2. Step 2

    Upload it to Panely and prompt the summary, trends, and breakdowns you need.

  3. Step 3

    Share the dashboard link for the weekly review instead of another spreadsheet attachment.

Who this fits best

  • Teams with a weekly sales meeting or reporting cadence
  • Ecommerce operators reviewing revenue and top-product trends
  • Founders who want one simple weekly dashboard link
  • Agencies building repeatable sales snapshots for clients

Keep going

FAQ

What should a weekly sales dashboard include?

Most teams start with total sales, period-over-period change, top products or channels, average order value, refunds, and one time-series chart for trend visibility.

Can this work with more than one export?

Yes. The workflow is especially useful when a weekly report needs inputs from more than one exported source before it becomes presentation-ready.

Why use a dashboard instead of a weekly spreadsheet?

Because the report structure repeats. A dashboard keeps the reporting layer consistent and easier to share, while the spreadsheet approach forces teams to rebuild the same visuals every week.