An operations command center with Power BI dashboards gives teams a unified view of performance across departments, systems, and locations. Instead of pulling data from separate tools or waiting for weekly reports, operations managers can monitor what matters in one place, in real time. This guide covers how to build one, which metrics to include, how to design for clarity, and how to extend visibility beyond the screen so your whole team benefits.
An operations command center is a shared decision hub. It brings together the data points that define operational health and presents them in a format that supports fast, consistent decision-making throughout the day.
Power BI is well-suited for this because it can pull visuals from multiple reports and semantic models into a single dashboard canvas. That means you can combine production, service, inventory, and workforce data into one view rather than forcing teams to switch between tools.
This setup is not just for executive reporting. It is most valuable on the floor, in service centers, and across operations teams where awareness and response speed directly affect outcomes.
Power BI supports live connections, scheduled refreshes, alerts, and natural language Q&A, making it practical for operational monitoring rather than just static reporting.
Operations teams use it to bring together data from ERP systems, CRMs, service desks, production lines, and workflow platforms. The result is a single place where managers can identify trends, spot exceptions early, and act before a problem compounds.
The platform also scales well. Whether you are managing one facility or multiple locations, Power BI can be configured to show site-level or consolidated views depending on who is looking.
Even organizations with solid data infrastructure run into visibility gaps. The most common issues include:
The deeper problem is that even well-designed dashboards fail when they live only inside browser tabs. If the people closest to the work are not seeing the numbers, the dashboard is not doing its job.
The right KPIs depend on your operation, but most command centers benefit from a combination of throughput, quality, speed, and capacity metrics. Common choices include:
Beyond raw numbers, include target-versus-actual comparisons, trend lines, and alert states. These give teams context, not just data. A throughput number means more when it shows whether performance is improving, holding, or drifting from target.
Limit the dashboard to the metrics that actually drive decisions. Every additional visual competes for attention. Fewer, clearer KPIs are more useful than a dense canvas that takes time to parse.
Operations dashboards need to communicate quickly. Keep these principles in mind when designing your layout:
If the dashboard will be shown on large screens or office TVs, test it on the actual hardware before deployment. Increase font sizes, reduce the number of visuals, and use whitespace to ensure key numbers stay legible from several meters away.
Data changes behavior when people see it continuously, not only during review cycles. This is the core principle behind a live operations command center with Power BI dashboards.
When a team can see shared metrics throughout the day, several things tend to happen:
A dashboard that only managers check in the morning cannot produce these outcomes. Shared, continuous visibility is what makes the difference.
RocketScreens bridges the gap between building a Power BI dashboard and making it genuinely visible across your operation. It connects securely to Power BI and allows teams to display reports and dashboards on office TVs, wall-mounted screens, and large displays without leaving them logged in to a personal BI account.
The platform supports over 100 cloud applications, which means Power BI sits alongside Looker Studio, Google Drive, SharePoint, Jira, Zendesk, and other tools teams already use. Content is managed centrally, assigned to channels and screens, and kept updated automatically so displays stay current without manual intervention.
For multi-location operations, RocketScreens allows centralized management across sites. Different screens can show different content depending on the team, department, or location, all managed from one interface.
Once Power BI is connected to RocketScreens, you have flexibility in what you display. Useful screen setups for operations teams include:
A practical example: a support team can display open ticket volume, SLA risk, resolution rate, and daily throughput on a shared floor screen. Instead of spending the first ten minutes of a huddle gathering status, the team walks in already knowing where things stand and can focus on what to do about it.
Getting from a blank canvas to a live operations command center involves a few clear steps:
The command center approach applies across different operations environments:
Manufacturing: Display production throughput, machine utilization, downtime events, and quality defect rates on floor screens so shift supervisors and line workers can see performance as it happens.
Logistics and supply chain: Show fulfillment speed, inventory levels, shipment status, and backlog aging to keep warehouse and dispatch teams aligned without relying on coordinator check-ins.
IT and service operations: Display incident volumes, SLA attainment, ticket aging, and team throughput to help service managers identify queue pressure and respond before SLA breaches occur.
Corporate operations: Use summary dashboards in common areas and meeting rooms to keep cross-functional teams aware of the same performance benchmarks and business health metrics.
Several predictable problems come up when organizations build operations dashboards:
Too many metrics. Adding every available KPI makes the dashboard hard to read and harder to act on. Pick the five to eight metrics that most reliably predict operational outcomes and stick with those.
Stale data. If refresh intervals are too long or connections are unreliable, the dashboard loses credibility. Configure refresh schedules appropriate to the speed of your operation and monitor connection health.
Dashboard buried in the BI tool. This is the most common failure mode. A dashboard that only a few people open does not improve operational awareness. Displaying it on shared screens using RocketScreens solves this directly.
No ownership. Dashboards should be assigned to someone responsible for keeping metrics accurate, connections working, and layouts current as the operation evolves.
It is a shared dashboard setup that brings operational KPIs, trends, and alerts into one place so teams can monitor performance and respond quickly without waiting for reports or status meetings.
Common choices include throughput, cycle time, downtime, inventory levels, SLA performance, backlog volume, quality metrics, and target-versus-actual comparisons. Choose metrics that directly reflect how the operation is performing and what actions teams can take.
A Power BI dashboard is a single canvas made of pinned visuals from one or more reports or semantic models. Reports are more detailed and tied to individual datasets. Dashboards are better suited for at-a-glance monitoring; reports are better for detailed analysis.
Putting dashboards on shared screens means teams see performance data continuously throughout the day, not only when they open the BI tool. This improves awareness, accelerates response to exceptions, and builds a shared understanding of performance across the team.
RocketScreens integrates securely with Power BI and lets teams select specific reports or dashboards to display on office screens. Content is managed centrally, updated automatically, and can be deployed across multiple screens or locations from one platform without leaving individual users logged in to BI accounts.
A Power BI operations dashboard is only as valuable as the visibility it creates. If your metrics live inside a tool that most of your team never opens, the work that went into building them is largely wasted.
RocketScreens makes it straightforward to take what you have built in Power BI and put it in front of the people who need it, on the screens where they work, updated automatically throughout the day.
If you want to see how it works for your operation, book a demo with the RocketScreens team or explore the platform to see the integrations available for your stack.