Posts tagged as:

hand drawn

Master mindmaps on paper are usually maps which show you lots of information on a certain topic. It can be very good to have an overview of all the information in a map. However…

When you create a master mindmap the information can become too scattered. You lose track and you lose the overview.

The master map becomes an overview of many pieces of information which is not easy to read and use.
[click to continue…]

VN:F [1.7.7_1013]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Popularity: 31% [?]

Share This Post

{ 3 comments }

It is called mind mapping. People tried them as mind maps. But are they really that what they seem to be?

A few years ago, I wrote together with Wallace Tait the “Visual Mapping: A Systematic Framework for Business Improvement” e-book (interested in this e-book? Send me a message and I send you a copy).

One of the thoughts behind that book was that computer mindmaps are not mindmaps in the traditional sense of the word. It is better to call a computer mindmap a visual map.

[click to continue…]

VN:F [1.7.7_1013]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Popularity: 15% [?]

Share This Post

{ 2 comments }

[ratings]

Last week we had a look at the mindmap showdown between mind mapping on paper and on your computer. Very interesting feedback, thanks a lot! It seems that most people are only using one of the two types of mapping information.

I have to admit that of my first 100 maps I created only 4 mindmaps on paper. These 4 were created during the training I took to learn how to mindmap and speedread. Then I arrived home after the training day and searched online for software tools.

Back then, there were not that many tools available. We didn’t have any online tools(right now I created my own online tool)! I downloaded a few of the tools and tested them. And you know what… the two tools I liked best then are the ones I still use.

[click to continue…]

VN:F [1.7.7_1013]
Rating: 0 (from 0 votes)

Popularity: 11% [?]

Share This Post

{ 4 comments }