Analytics & insights · Dashboards

Explore watch analytics: trends, completion and top videos

Watch analytics shows everything ever watched in your library — total views, unique users, average completion and top videos — with time-range filters and year-by-year drill-down.

One dashboard for your entire viewing history

Watch analytics is the long-view companion to content analytics. Where the content view focuses on the last 30 days, watch analytics covers everything ever watched on your platform. If you migrated from another platform and imported your viewing history, that historical data is merged with live activity, so your charts tell one continuous story.

Five headline numbers sit at the top: total views, unique users, videos watched, average completion rate and when the latest view happened. Average completion is especially telling — it shows whether people finish what they start.

Filter by time and drill into a year

A filter pill lets you switch between all time, the last year, the last 90 days or the last 30 days. Below it, the Views per year bar chart is always all-time — and every bar is clickable: click a year to filter the whole dashboard down to just that period. A trend line then shows daily, weekly or monthly views depending on the range you picked.

The Top 10 videos list ranks your most-watched content in the selected period, with unique user counts. Videos that exist in your current library link straight to their admin page.

Countries and devices

If your imported history includes geography and device information, you'll also see country and device breakdowns alongside the top videos. Platforms without that historical data simply see the top videos take the full width — no empty panels.

Step by step

  1. In your admin menu, open the Dashboard section and click Watch analytics.
  2. Use the time-range filter to pick all time, last year, last 90 days or last 30 days.
  3. Click any bar in the Views per year chart to drill into that year.
  4. Review the headline cards — pay special attention to average completion.
  5. Open any of the Top 10 videos to review or improve that class.

Good to know

  • A low average completion on a top video can mean the video is too long or mislabeled — check its title and description.
  • Hover over chart points for exact numbers; the tooltips work on every chart.

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