A live dashboard with feedback trends, weekly breakdowns, and a real-time stream of every vote, post, and comment. Built in, no setup, no extra tool.
A clean time-series chart showing every new post, comment, and upvote across the date range you pick. Toggle layers, compare totals against feature requests, and instantly see whether a launch is moving the needle.
A weekly or monthly snapshot of new feedback, total upvotes, new comments, and active users, with percentage deltas against the previous period. The morning standup view, built in.
A continuously updating feed of community activity. See what users submitted minutes ago, jump into a thread, or open the full-screen view on a TV in the office. This is the heartbeat of your feedback loop.
Anna submitted Feature Request "Image gallery"
"Add an image gallery to the sidebar where users can see and open all images of all posts and scroll..."
18h ago
Marcus submitted Feature Request "Add images after posting"
"Right now, you can't add images after you've posted feedback. This should be possible."
2d ago
Upvoty commented on feedback "Ability to hide 'Voters' box on post page"
"Hey Anna, we can definitely work on this. For now, as a quick fix, you can use the custom HTML/CSS..."
2d ago
Sofie commented on feedback "Deleted Feedback"
9d ago
Built for product teams, not data analysts.
Compare any two periods.
Filter analytics by board.
Posts, votes, comments together.
Auto-calculated vs. previous.
Real-time activity feed.
Full-screen for your office.
Pipe data into anything.
Raw events via Upvoty API.
Feedback without analytics is a suggestion box. Feedback with analytics is a product signal. Most teams that adopt a voting board ship for a few weeks and then quietly stop checking it, not because the feedback is bad, but because there is no built-in way to see whether engagement is growing, whether a launch landed, or whether a particular board needs more attention. Upvoty's analytics layer fixes that with three views that work together: a trends graph, a breakdown widget, and a live activity stream.
The trends graph is the long view. Pick any date range, layer total activity against feature requests, and you can see at a glance whether your community is heating up or cooling down. Pair this with the launch dates of your changelog entries and you get a clear answer to the question every executive eventually asks: "did that release actually move engagement?".
New feedback, total upvotes, new comments, active users, each with a percentage delta against the previous period. This is the dashboard a product manager opens with their coffee. It surfaces the four numbers that matter without forcing anyone to assemble a custom chart. When new feedback is up 30% week-over-week, the team knows. When active users dropped, the team knows that too, and can dig into the trend graph to find when it started.
Because the widget supports per-board filtering, teams running both a public board and an internal beta board get independent reads on each community. Combine it with segments and you can break the same numbers down by plan, MRR tier, or any custom attribute, the kind of analytics that usually requires a separate BI tool.
The live activity stream shows every new post, every comment, and every vote in real time. Most teams pin it on a second monitor or in a dedicated Slack channel via the Slack integration. We have customers who run it in full-screen TV mode in their office, a small ambient signal that the product is alive and people care.
Beyond ambient awareness, the live stream is the fastest way to close the loop. When a long-time customer posts a request, your team sees it instantly and can reply within minutes. That responsiveness compounds: users see that their feedback is read, they post more, and the contributor leaderboard grows organically as participation increases.
Every analytics view in Upvoty exports to CSV with one click. For teams that need recurring stakeholder reports, the weekly email digest pulls the same numbers into a clean recap delivered to executives, account managers, or board members on a schedule. And for teams with a data warehouse, the Upvoty API exposes raw events, votes, posts, comments, status changes, so analytics can live alongside your billing data, product analytics, and CRM in one place.
The goal is simple: feedback should not be a tool you have to advocate for internally. With built-in analytics, the numbers do the advocating. Trend lines move. Engagement compounds. The link between community votes and the public roadmap becomes visible to the whole company. That is when a feedback portal stops being a side project and starts being a core piece of how the product is built.
Turn user feedback into actionable product optimizations. 14-day free trial, no credit card required.