Your Dashboard
One place that shows your site is working — and lets you keep improving it.
After you publish, the dashboard becomes home base. It's not an analytics graveyard you visit once. It's a living control surface that mirrors everything Yoshi does for you: how your site scores, what it's made of, what changed, and what to do next.
A widget for every part of your site
The dashboard is built from cards, each one a window onto a real part of the pipeline:
| widget | what it tells you | status |
|---|---|---|
| Scores | Performance, Accessibility, Best-Practices, SEO — graded, per page, trending over time | soon |
| Pages | every page Yoshi made, searchable, with its individual health | planned |
| Content | your services, areas, reviews, photos — edit any of them, the site updates | planned |
| SEO | what you rank for, gaps to fill, schema + sitemap health | planned |
| Deploys | what's live, what changed, roll back if needed | planned |
| Blog | drafts + published posts that keep the site fresh | planned |
| Domain | your address, SSL, custom-domain status | planned |
The dashboard grows with the product. Every time Yoshi gains a new capability, a card for it appears here — sometimes before the feature is fully built, so you can see where things are heading (clearly marked Soon / Roadmap). The dashboard is a promise you watch get kept.
Scores you can trust (not vanity numbers)
The first widget is Scores, and it's honest by design. Yoshi runs real Lighthouse audits against your live site and grades every page — and it doesn't chase a fake "100" by gaming the measurement. A heavy page scores lower because it is heavier; that's a signal you can act on, not a number we inflate.
Steering continues here
Everything you could do at preview, you can still do from the dashboard — in plain language. "Add a winter-tire service." "Refresh the homepage copy." "My hours changed." The dashboard is just preview & steer, after launch, with the added view of how your live site is performing. Build and manage are the same gesture.
For builders & agencies
If you manage many sites (the Studio), the dashboard scales up: a portfolio view across all your clients, the same widgets per site, and bulk actions. (See Plans → Studio.)