The average dashboard gets opened twice and forgotten: a wall of charts with no beginning or end, where the number that matters is lost among the ones that don't. Data Sagas does the opposite. It takes your numbers and arranges them as a story —with an origin, a tension and a way out— so you leave knowing what to do, not with more tabs to check.
Three acts
Origin. Where your numbers come from: the baseline, the seasonal pulse, the foundation. Conflict. The tension the average hides —where money leaks, which segment is cooling, which opportunity is slipping. Resolution. The path the story asks for: concrete recommendations, a projection, and “what-if” branches to explore decisions before you make them.
The narrative is the skin; underneath is real analytics
Each act runs its own methods, not decorative charts: seasonal decomposition to split season from trend, RFM segmentation and cohort retention for the characters, price × volume × mix to know why the total moved, changepoint detection, and forecasts with confidence intervals —never a lone line— plus elasticity and CLV for the scenarios. Every figure ships with its uncertainty: the story never narrates noise as if it were a plot twist.
The plans
Sketch ($170/month). One key metric a month, read as a story, plus a quarterly mini-recap — the entry point. Chapter ($380/month). The full three-act chapter each quarter —multi-source, characters, atmosphere and a 60–90 s video recap— with a monthly pulse in between. The most requested. Saga ($780/month). A living document with the full analytics engine, its own visual identity each year, an annual retrospective and interactive branching.
How it's delivered
One chapter per quarter and a short pulse each month, always as scrollable web —and, if you want it, a one-page poster, a video recap for the partner who won't read, or an annual leave-behind PDF. The data comes from what you already have (sales, bookings, CRM, reviews, Google); if it isn't connected yet, Enlace connects it. In soles, no annual contract: one month's notice and you're out. You can see an interactive sample before deciding.