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Social Media Analytics Spreadsheet for Every Platform

A multi-platform social media analytics spreadsheet that tracks followers, engagement, reach, and content performance across Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, Facebook, and X. Pre-loaded with 2026 engagement rate benchmarks.

Last updated: March 2026 · 9 min read

About This Spreadsheet

What does this social media analytics spreadsheet track?

Six tabs covering platform-by-platform metrics, content performance, audience growth, engagement trends, and competitive benchmarks.

Social media platforms give you native analytics. Instagram shows you reach and engagement. LinkedIn shows impressions and clicks. TikTok shows views and shares. But none of them show you how all your platforms perform side by side, or how this month compares to the last six. This spreadsheet consolidates your social media data into one view. You enter post-level or weekly aggregate data per platform, and the formulas calculate engagement rate, follower growth rate, reach rate, and content performance scores. The dashboard tab gives you a cross-platform summary that answers the question every marketing director asks: “How are we doing on social?”

Social media analytics spreadsheet: A tracking document that records platform-level and post-level social media performance data, calculates engagement metrics, and compares results across platforms and time periods.

The spreadsheet includes:
  • Cross-platform dashboard summarizing followers, engagement rate, and reach across all channels
  • Instagram tracker with post-level data for feed, Reels, Stories, and carousel formats
  • LinkedIn tracker with post-level data for articles, image posts, document carousels, and video
  • TikTok tracker with views, shares, comments, and completion rate per video
  • Audience growth tab showing weekly follower changes and growth rate per platform
  • 2026 benchmark tab with engagement rate data from Social Insider and Buffer
Who It’s For

Who should use this social media analytics spreadsheet?

Social media managers, content teams, and marketing leaders who need cross-platform reporting.

Social Media Managers

Track every post’s performance in one place. The post-level trackers log format type (Reel, carousel, static), topic category, and engagement metrics so you can identify which content types perform best over 30, 60, and 90-day windows.

Marketing Directors

The dashboard tab is your monthly reporting view. Total followers across platforms, blended engagement rate, top-performing posts, and audience growth trend. Send it as a screenshot in your weekly update or paste it into a deck.

Growth Firms Managing Client Accounts

Duplicate the spreadsheet per client. The benchmark tab lets you show clients how their engagement compares to industry averages from Social Insider’s 2026 report. Context turns data into a story.

2026 Benchmarks

What are the social media engagement benchmarks for 2026?

Pre-loaded in the spreadsheet for instant comparison against your own metrics.

Platform Avg. Engagement Rate YoY Change Key Trend
TikTok 3.70% +49% Shares per post up 45% YoY
LinkedIn ~6.1% -6% Highest median engagement of any platform
Instagram 0.48% Flat Comments per post down 16% YoY
Facebook 0.15% -8% Gradual organic reach decline continues
X (Twitter) 0.12% -20% Engagement sliding since 2024

Source: Social Insider 2026 Social Media Benchmarks; Buffer State of Social Media Engagement 2026. Engagement rate = (likes + comments + shares) / followers. LinkedIn’s high rate reflects its smaller but more active audience base compared to consumer platforms.

How to Use It

How do you set up this social media tracker?

Four steps from download to weekly reporting routine.

Step 1: Choose your platforms. The spreadsheet includes tabs for Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, Facebook, and X. Delete the tabs you don’t use, or hide them. The dashboard auto-detects which platform tabs have data and adjusts its summary calculations. Step 2: Enter your baseline metrics. On each platform tab, enter your current follower count, average engagement rate for the past month, and any other starting metrics. This gives the growth calculations a reference point. Step 3: Log post-level or weekly data. For detailed tracking, enter every post with its format type, topic category, reach, impressions, likes, comments, shares, and saves. For lighter tracking, enter weekly totals. Both approaches work. The formulas calculate engagement rate, reach rate, and growth metrics regardless of granularity. Step 4: Review the dashboard weekly. The dashboard pulls totals from all platform tabs and shows week-over-week and month-over-month changes. Brands posting 5 times per week per platform (the 2026 median per Social Insider) will have enough data for meaningful trend analysis within 3-4 weeks.
Expert Context

What should you actually measure on social media?

Most social media reports are vanity reports. Follower count goes up, everyone celebrates. But follower count without engagement context is meaningless. You can have 50,000 followers and an engagement rate of 0.1%, which means 50 people are actually interacting with your content. A 5,000-follower account with a 3% engagement rate has three times the active audience. That’s why this spreadsheet puts engagement rate front and center, not follower count. The dashboard’s primary metric is engagement rate by platform, with follower count as supporting context. Buffer’s 2026 analysis of 52 million posts confirmed what we’ve seen across client accounts: engagement rate correlates with business outcomes (website clicks, leads, sales) far more than raw follower growth. The data also shows a shift in engagement types. Average comments per post fell on TikTok (down 24%) and Instagram (down 16%) in 2025, while shares on TikTok jumped 45%. This means people are engaging differently. They’re sharing content with friends instead of commenting publicly. The tracker captures shares as a separate metric so you can see this pattern in your own data.

“I stopped looking at follower count on client reports two years ago. The metric that predicts whether social media is actually working for a business is engagement rate segmented by content type. When you know that your LinkedIn carousels get 4x the engagement of image posts, you stop guessing what to publish. The analytics spreadsheet exists to make that pattern obvious.”

Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital

At ScaleGrowth.Digital, our social media management engagements use this exact spreadsheet structure. We update it weekly for every client, and it drives the content strategy conversation. When the data shows Reels outperforming carousels by 2x on engagement, we shift the content mix. When LinkedIn document posts plateau, we test video. The spreadsheet makes those decisions data-backed instead of gut-based.

Download the Social Media Analytics Spreadsheet

Google Sheets format with post-level tracking, engagement formulas, and 2026 benchmarks. Download Free Spreadsheet

Spreadsheet format. No spam. Instant access.

Related Resources

What other tracking tools should you use?

Complete your marketing analytics stack with these spreadsheets.

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If you’re running paid social alongside organic, track both in separate spreadsheets and compare performance. Organic engagement + paid conversions = full social picture. Get Tracker

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you calculate social media engagement rate?

Engagement rate = (likes + comments + shares + saves) / followers x 100. Some teams calculate it against reach instead of followers, which gives a higher number. This spreadsheet uses the followers-based formula because it’s the industry standard used by Social Insider, Sprout Social, and Buffer in their benchmark reports. Both formulas are included so you can choose.

Why is LinkedIn’s engagement rate so much higher than Instagram’s?

LinkedIn has smaller follower bases per account (typically 1,000-10,000 for most brands) compared to Instagram (10,000-100,000+). The engagement rate formula divides interactions by followers, so fewer followers with active engagement produces a higher percentage. LinkedIn’s professional audience also tends to interact more deliberately than consumer-platform users scrolling casually.

Should I track every single post or use weekly totals?

Post-level tracking gives you better insights. You can identify which formats, topics, and posting times drive the highest engagement. Weekly totals work if you’re short on time, but you lose the ability to compare individual posts. We recommend post-level tracking for your primary platform and weekly totals for secondary channels.

How often should I update the social media analytics spreadsheet?

Weekly is the right cadence for most teams. Social media data needs 3-5 days to stabilize (posts continue getting engagement after the first 24 hours). Updating on Monday for the previous week gives posts time to accumulate their full engagement before you record the final numbers.

Can I add Pinterest or YouTube to this tracker?

Yes. Duplicate any existing platform tab and rename it. Adjust the column headers to match that platform’s metrics (for YouTube: views, watch time, likes, comments, subscribers gained; for Pinterest: impressions, saves, outbound clicks, pin clicks). The dashboard formulas will automatically include the new tab if you follow the naming convention in the instructions.

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