Typeform export → dashboard

Your responses, readable at last.

Typeform's results table is one row per response. Export it, drop the CSV here, and every question becomes a clickable distribution — with submissions trending over time and any answer usable as a filter.

01 · How it works

Export, drop, done.

Survey answers are categories begging to be counted. Each question column turns into a distribution; each answer becomes a filter against every other question.

i. export

Download responses

In your form: Results → Responses → Download → CSV (all responses).

ii. detect

Questions become breakdowns

Each question column is detected as a category; the Submitted At column drives the response trend; numeric scores read as numbers.

iii. read

Distributions & segments

See the answer mix per question, then click an answer — every other question recomputes for that segment.

02 · The views

Cross-tabs without the export to Excel.

The thing you actually want from survey data: how one answer relates to another.

  • 01

    Per-question splits

    Every question's answer distribution, side by side, ranked by frequency.

  • 02

    Instant segments

    Click 'Heard about us: Twitter' and watch satisfaction, scores and every other answer recompute for that group.

  • 03

    Response curve

    Submissions over time show the blast radius of each share or campaign.

  • 04

    Respondent privacy

    Emails and free-text answers stay in your browser — nothing is uploaded.

"Clicked one answer and finally saw the cross-tab: detractors all came from one acquisition channel."
— a product researcher
03 · FAQ

Typeform dashboard questions.

Which Typeform export works?
The responses CSV (Results → Responses → Download). Each question is a column; a submitted-at timestamp column drives the trend.
High-uniqueness text columns are treated as text rather than categories, so they don't produce useless 200-slice charts. Use the table view to read them.
Yes — click an answer in one question's breakdown and every other chart recomputes for that segment. For a classic grid, the crosstab tool does exactly that.
No — parsing and charting happen locally in your browser.
Yes — there's a dedicated Google Forms dashboard page, and any responses CSV with a timestamp builds the same way.