LinkedIn Ads export → dashboard

Your Campaign Manager export, your LinkedIn Ads dashboard.

Export a performance report from LinkedIn Campaign Manager, drop the CSV, and see total spend, the trend over time, CTR, CPC and which campaigns actually drive leads — without rebuilding the pivot again.

01 · How it works

Export, drop, done.

Campaign Manager is fine for setup, slow for a quick performance read. Export the report CSV and this builds the view you actually check: total spend, the trend, CTR and CPC, and which campaigns turn budget into leads.

i. export

Export from Campaign Manager

Campaign Manager → Export → CSV. The performance columns (Date, Campaign Name, Impressions, Clicks, CTR, Average CPC, Total Spent, Leads) are all we need.

ii. detect

Total Spent becomes spend

The Total Spent column is recognized as currency and used as the headline metric. Date becomes the time axis for the trend.

iii. read

Spend, CTR, CPC, leads

Total spend, the trend over time, CTR and CPC, and leads by campaign and type — click any bar to filter the whole view.

02 · The views

The performance read Campaign Manager hides.

Everything you check before a budget review, arranged automatically from the raw export.

  • 01

    Spend at a glance

    Total Spent up top, with the trend over time so you can see where budget went, week by week.

  • 02

    Cost and efficiency

    CTR and Average CPC surface as KPIs, so you can spot expensive clicks before they drain a campaign.

  • 03

    Leads by campaign

    Campaign Name and Campaign Type become clickable breakdowns — see which campaign and format actually convert spend into leads.

  • 04

    Private by default

    Your Ads data is parsed locally. It never leaves your browser — verify in DevTools → Network.

"I drop the Campaign Manager export and the spend-to-leads picture is right there, no pivot to babysit."
— a B2B marketer
03 · FAQ

LinkedIn dashboard questions.

Which LinkedIn Ads export works?
The standard Campaign Manager performance export (Campaign Manager → Export → CSV). Any CSV with a Date, a Campaign Name and numeric columns like Total Spent, Clicks, CTR and Leads works.
Yes — Total Spent is the headline currency metric, CTR and Average CPC surface as KPIs, and Leads totals roll up per campaign so you can read cost per lead at a glance.
Yes — click any bar or slice (campaign name or campaign type) and the whole dashboard recomputes against that filter, spend, CTR, CPC and leads included.
No. Parsing and aggregation happen entirely in your browser. The export never touches a server — there is nothing to upload.
Yes. Whatever date grain the export uses, daily or weekly, the Date column becomes the time axis and spend is plotted across it as a trend.