Why most operator dashboards quietly lie to their CEOs
The numbers on the dashboard are never wrong — but the frame is. Three patterns that turn clean data into misleading narratives, and how to audit your own dashboard in under an hour.
Every CEO has had the moment: the dashboard looks green, the meeting goes well, and two weeks later a customer churn or a cash crunch lands that nobody saw coming. The dashboard was not wrong. It just was not looking at the right thing.
Three patterns that quietly mislead
- Averages without distributions — 'average deal size €42k' hides that half your revenue is from two accounts.
- Lagging indicators dressed as leading — MRR is a lagging indicator. What the CEO needs is pipeline velocity, and that lives two systems away.
- Vanity ratios that move on their own — 'activation rate' climbs because you raised the bar for what counts as a signup, not because the product got better.
A one-hour audit you can run today
For each tile on your dashboard, ask two questions. One: if this number goes green, what board-level decision do I make differently? Two: what would have to be true for this number to look good while the business is actually in trouble? If you cannot answer both in under a minute per tile, that tile is decoration, not instrumentation.
The best dashboards have fewer tiles than people expect. Every tile that is not answering a decision is competing for the attention of the ones that are.
When we build reporting inside Philly, we start from the decision, not the data. It forces uncomfortable conversations — 'we actually don't know what we would do if this number moved' — but those are the conversations that make the dashboard worth building.