Most dashboards break the week after you build them. Someone renames a column, someone rewires a webhook, and by Monday your chart is lying to you. The dashboard is still there. The numbers are still there. They just don’t mean what you think they mean anymore.
Today we’re rolling out Views — live dashboards built and maintained by your AI colleagues, not by you. Every View has an owner, and that owner is the colleague responsible for keeping it correct.
Dashboards your colleagues own
With Views, every dashboard has an owner — a real AI colleague who is responsible for keeping it correct. If a column changes name, they rename it in the query. If a new segment appears, they add a chart for it. If a metric drifts, they find out why and write the explanation into the view.
The view stays alive because someone is alive inside it.
Concretely, here’s what that looks like when something breaks:
- Your CRM renames “Closed-Won” to “Won”. The pipeline view’s “Deals closed this week” tile goes to zero. The colleague who owns the view notices within the next update cycle, traces the definition back to the CRM field, updates the query, and annotates the view: “CRM renamed Closed-Won → Won on April 8.” You see the annotation; the chart is correct again; nobody paged anyone.
- A new product SKU launches. The revenue view’s “Revenue by product” chart is now missing 8% of revenue because the new SKU isn’t in the chart. The owner notices the total-vs-sum mismatch, adds the new SKU, and annotates it. The chart is right before you notice it’s wrong.
This is the whole design: views drift because data drifts, and a colleague’s job is to close the gap before you do.
What’s in the launch
Four built-in views, each owned by a specific colleague out of the box:
- Pipeline — live sales pipeline, owned by Lisa. Deals, stages, at-risk accounts, handoffs. Explains itself when the numbers move.
- Revenue — ARR, MRR, new vs expansion, churn, segment breakdowns. Owned by Mark.
- Support — ticket volume, response time, top issues, customers at risk. Owned by Casie.
- Activity — what every colleague did this week, what’s blocked, what’s pending approval. Owned by Ruby.
Each one is editable — you can add tiles, change time windows, filter by team — and the colleague picks up responsibility for everything you add. Ask Lisa to add “Pipeline by rep this quarter” and from that point on, that tile is part of her rounds.
Custom Views
If none of the four built-ins match what you need, you can create one yourself. The flow is:
- Open Views and click “New View.”
- Describe what you want to track, in a sentence.
- Pick a colleague to own it.
That’s it. The owner drafts the view — usually three to five tiles they think match your intent — and shows it to you. You nudge it into shape in the chat (add X, remove Y, group by Z), and when you’re happy, it’s live. The colleague takes over maintenance from that point forward.
Why this matters
The cost of a stale dashboard is almost never zero. Someone makes a small decision based on a chart that’s wrong, and the cost is invisible until a quarter later when the trend line didn’t mean what everyone thought. The reason dashboards go stale isn’t that people are lazy; it’s that the work of maintaining them is boring, adjacent to the actual job, and easy to defer until next sprint.
Views is our bet that “next sprint” for dashboard maintenance should be “the next scheduled check your AI colleague runs.” Not because AI colleagues are smarter than humans at understanding charts — they aren’t, yet — but because they will do the maintenance reliably, at 2am, without reminders, forever.
Availability
Views is live for every Eluu customer as of today. Open the Views tab in your workspace to try it. If you’re not yet using Eluu, book a demo and we’ll walk you through it.
We’d love to hear what you build.