Services - Reedys
Custom dashboards & internal tools
your numbers, one screen, no per-seat fees.
Dashboard development for ecommerce brands: custom reporting that pulls your Shopify sales, your Meta ads and the rest of your stack into one live screen - plus the small internal tools that replace spreadsheet chaos. Custom software development at studio scale, built by the person who already lives in ecommerce numbers.
what a custom dashboard covers
- Ecommerce dashboards: revenue, orders and AOV by channel, live rather than exported
- Marketing KPIs: spend and ROAS across accounts, in plain English
- Operations views: inventory, fulfilment and the numbers your team checks daily
- Internal tools: order lookups, calculators and workflow apps that replace shared spreadsheets
why custom beats another saas subscription
Template dashboards and BI seats show their KPIs, their way, at a per-seat price that grows with your team. A custom dashboard is yours: your metrics, your definitions, one login, no monthly meter running.
And the honest counterpoint, as always: if an existing tool genuinely fits your case, you'll hear that on the call instead of a build quote.
built by the person who reads the numbers
Reedys' ads clients already get plain-English reporting as part of the service - a custom dashboard is that habit turned into software you can open any hour of the day. And the build credibility is the thing you're reading: reedysagency.com is custom software, designed and built end to end by Reedys on the same stack your dashboard would use.
straight answers
- What data sources can you pull into a dashboard?
- Shopify and Meta ads are home turf. Beyond that, anything with an API is on the table - email platforms, review tools, spreadsheets - and the exact list is what the scope call establishes.
- How much does custom dashboard development cost?
- Flat, plain-English quote after the 20-minute call. Compare it honestly against the compounding cost of per-seat BI subscriptions - a custom build is a one-time price for exactly the numbers you need.
- Do we actually need a dashboard, or just a spreadsheet?
- Sometimes a spreadsheet is the right answer, and you'll be told so. A dashboard earns its keep when the numbers need to be live, shared across people and correct without someone manually exporting data every Monday.
- Who maintains it after launch?
- The person who built it. Dashboards and internal tools are built lean so they run quietly and cheaply - and when your stack changes, you message Reece, not a support queue.