X/Twitter Analytics from Discord: Track Engagement and Score Creator Light Program Members

Summary

Set up Discord + X/Twitter integration analytics to measure actions and people, link members to Twitter IDs for points, and review Community Feed mentions.

If you run a Creator Light Program in Discord, the X/Twitter analytics included in the Discord Twitter integration can help you measure participation and engagement. You can see how your tweet performs (by action type and day), score members using Twitter ID activity, and review member mentions through Community Feed analytics.

This guide walks through what the integration reports and how the dashboards are organized so you can focus on the engagement signals that matter most.

Overview: what X/Twitter analytics you can get from Discord

Once Twitter integration features are enabled through Discord, you can view analytics that track both:

  • How many actions happened (for example: retweets, replies, likes)
  • How many people interacted with your tweet

The analytics can be broken down by day and by action type. In the dashboard, you can click into the data to focus on a specific action category rather than looking at everything at once.

The transcript example shows how attribution can differ by interaction type. For instance, on a given day (like “January 14”), the dashboard can attribute:

  • Retweets to members
  • A follow to someone in your Discord community
  • A reply to someone who saw the tweet via Discord

That action-by-action attribution helps you understand which parts of your community and distribution channel are driving specific engagement.

How to track actions and people (retweets, replies, likes) by day

The core tweet analytics highlight two dimensions:

  1. Actions: counts of retweets, replies, likes (and related interaction types available in the integration)
  2. People: counts of the unique people who interacted

You can view these metrics with a daily breakdown, so it’s easier to see changes over time instead of relying on a single aggregate total.

From the dashboard, you can also move through interactions by clicking and narrowing the view. The transcript emphasizes that you can filter to concentrate on the action category you care about (for example, retweets vs. replies vs. likes).

Filtering analytics to focus on specific action types

If you’re running a Creator Light Program, you likely care about certain behaviors more than others. The integration supports this workflow by letting you:

  • Click into the analytics dashboard
  • Filter the view to focus on a specific task type / action type

This is useful when you want to answer questions like:

  • Which members are generating the retweets you need?
  • Are replies coming from the Discord community, or from people who saw the tweet via Discord?
  • How do likes trend day by day for your campaign?

Rather than treating engagement as one blended number, the dashboard separates interaction types and makes it easier to interpret what’s driving each outcome.

Member analytics: link Discord members to Twitter IDs for points

Beyond tweet-level analytics, the Discord Twitter integration also provides member-level performance tracking.

The transcript describes this as linking:

  • a Discord member
  • to their Twitter ID

Then the system calculates point totals based on Twitter actions. The transcript characterizes this part as purely quantitative—it focuses on counts of activity rather than qualitative assessment.

In the example described, a user with two replies and two retweets is shown with a total action count (the transcript describes a total of actions), and the program can translate those action counts into points.

You can then apply point thresholds to map totals to Discord roles. The transcript suggests using a row management program to manage those thresholds and role assignments.

Community Feed analytics for Creator Light Programs (mentions + checks)

For Creator Light Programs, there’s an additional layer called Community Feed analytics.

These analytics focus on members who mention you. With this feature enabled, you can access member data related to their mentions, including metrics such as:

  • days tweeted
  • rejected tweets
  • tweets shown

The transcript also describes a drill-down workflow: you can click a user to review the tweets they posted about you. This helps you assess the quality of what they shared within the program context.

If you’re deciding how to manage the program over time, these insights can support practical next steps like deciding whether to recruit members more formally or use non-monetary rewards to encourage better tweeting so the program remains active and aligned.

How to enable the analytics (install the bot + turn on Twitter integration)

The analytics described in the transcript become available after you:

  • install the bot
  • enable Twitter integration features

The transcript emphasizes that once these steps are complete, the analytics come automatically, including:

  • tweet-level action and people counts (with daily breakdowns)
  • member analytics tied to Discord member + Twitter ID points
  • Community Feed analytics for members who mention you

Conclusion

Discord’s X/Twitter integration analytics give you a structured way to track creator program performance. You can review tweet engagement by day and action type (retweets, replies, likes), filter to focus on specific behaviors, link Discord members to Twitter IDs to calculate points, and use Community Feed analytics to examine member mentions, including metrics like rejected tweets and tweets shown.

If you’re running a Creator Light Program, these reports help you measure engagement and participation, then make clearer decisions about rewards and program management.