Use cases

Real ways people turn data into authority.

Whatever you measure, the goal is the same: proof that lands. Here is how founders, marketers and consultants put Reochart to work.

Founders & operators

Turn traction into proof, the moment it happens.

Investors and followers skim. A growth curve that draws itself on, or a milestone that counts up, lands in a way a cropped spreadsheet never will, and it quietly signals that you run the business with rigor. Keep the same charts month over month and your updates start to read like a track record.

  • Post the MRR jump the day you hit it, not buried three slides into a deck
  • Turn a “we crossed 10,000 users” line into a moment worth sharing
  • Send investor updates that look consistent, current and on-brand
LinkedIn · X · investor updates · board decks

Marketers & growth

Make the result the creative.

Your wins are your best-performing content. A funnel that animates the drop-off you fixed, or a before-and-after that reads in a single glance, stops the scroll where a flat screenshot gets skipped, and it goes out on your brand rather than your analytics tool’s. Sized for the feed, exported in seconds.

  • Show the conversion funnel with the drop-off you actually improved
  • Frame a before and after as one obvious comparison
  • Ship a weekly KPI scorecard your audience starts to expect
LinkedIn · Instagram · newsletters · ad creative

Consultants & analysts

Render the analysis with a firm’s polish.

Frameworks and findings carry more weight rendered cleanly, on your own brand. A crisp 2×2 or a P&L waterfall signals authority before the client reads a word, and you build it in two minutes instead of fighting a slide tool’s chart menu. Drop it into the deck, the report or the QBR and move on.

  • Drop a branded 2×2 into a deck without opening a design tool
  • Explain what moved the number with a waterfall, not a paragraph
  • Publish benchmarks that look like a firm produced them
Client decks · reports · quarterly reviews

Your data has a story. Tell it well.

Pick a visual, drop in your numbers, and post something people stop for, in about two minutes.