A rebuilt clickable areas editor, custom viewer themes, and visitor analytics

The back half of June went into the parts of the dashboard you spend the most time in: drawing clickable areas on floor plans, theming the viewer, and reading what visitors actually do.

A rebuilt clickable areas editor

Mapping a floor plan image to its apartments used to be fiddly. The shape editor is rebuilt around a workspace closer to a design tool: a sidebar listing every area and point, a floating toolbar, smooth panning, and zoom controls. You can group shapes, sort and filter the list, and filter down to just the areas that aren't mapped yet so nothing slips through.

Edits are local-first now, with undo, redo, and a save button instead of every change committing the moment you make it. If you navigate away with unsaved work, it warns you first. Selecting an item auto-centers it in view, and the point markers match what they look like in the live viewer, so what you draw is what buyers see.

One way in, with smarter matching

Creating clickable areas now starts from a single dialog that asks how you want to do it (generate them from images or upload your own) instead of two separate buttons. When you bring in files, matching them to apartments no longer cares about case or stray spaces, so a12.png links to apartment A12 the way you'd expect. Each file shows the apartment it resolved to, and a naming guide lists your project's real frame numbers and apartment names so you can see what to call things. For files that don't match anything, the editor suggests the closest apartment name.

Behind the scenes, the image tracer also got cleaner: stacked overlay points are de-duplicated and sharp corners are preserved, so traced shapes come out tidier.

Design your own viewer theme

You can now create, edit, and preview a custom theme for a project's viewer right in its settings, with a live mock of how it looks before you publish. Match the viewer to your branding instead of picking from presets alone.

Project analytics by device, reach, and source

Project analytics gained a few new views. A device breakdown shows how visitors split across desktop, mobile, and tablet. Overall reach summarizes how many people you're getting in front of. Inquiries are now tagged with where they came from, so you can see which sources turn into real leads, and a top-apartments view shows which units draw the most attention.

Delete a project or organization

There's now a danger zone for removing a project or an entire organization. Deleting hides it everywhere immediately, then a background job cleans up the data, media, and billing tied to it. It asks you to type the exact name to confirm, and it's limited to admins.

Units and embeds

The units export now carries net and gross price, sold price, a price note, and tour links, so the spreadsheet you hand off is complete. Units list their created and updated dates in the dashboard, while those columns stay hidden from the public viewer. When you add images whose names already exist, you can keep them as new entries instead of being forced to replace. And embedded viewers lazy-load their iframe by default, so a page hosting one stays fast until the viewer is actually scrolled into view.