Dashboard in six new languages, spreadsheet import and export, and global search
The week after the early-June analytics release went to two things: moving your data in and out of the platform, and making the dashboard work in more than just English.
The dashboard in your language
The whole dashboard is translated now. Alongside English you can switch to German, Spanish, Dutch, Polish, Russian, or Ukrainian from the language picker in the sidebar. Your choice is saved to your account, so it sticks across devices instead of resetting every time you sign in.
Import and export units as spreadsheets
You can bring units into a project from a CSV or Excel file instead of adding them one at a time. Upload the file, preview how the columns map and what will change, then apply. Areas default to m² in the import the same way they do in the editor, so the numbers line up.
Export goes the other way: download a project's units as a spreadsheet to edit offline or keep as a record.
Export inquiries to Excel
Inquiries export to Excel straight from the inquiries page. Hand the buyer list to your sales team, or work through it yourself in a spreadsheet. We added it to the landing page too, so prospective customers can see it's there.
Find any inquiry from the command palette
Global inquiry search lives in the command palette now. Start typing a name, email, or part of a message and jump straight to the matching inquiry from anywhere in the dashboard. It tolerates typos, so a slightly misspelled name still lands on the right person.
Richer project trends
The project analytics trend chart picked up date-range controls and now splits engaged visits from bounces, so real interest shows separately from drive-by traffic. It also folds in 360 tour activity, so the floor plans and the panoramas sit in the same view.
Lead and project insights on the landing page
The landing page now shows the lead scoring and project insight features directly, so visitors can see what the platform does with viewer activity before they sign in.
Smoother loading
Across the dashboard, settings, and notifications, spinners gave way to skeleton placeholders that mirror the layout of the content while it loads. Pages feel quicker and steadier instead of flashing a blank state.