Sort out those disorganized thoughts with a Mind Map

iStockphotoYou know the feeling: you are involved in some intractable problem that has all kinds of weird angles and you just can’t get your head around it—perhaps you feel like you are inspecting an elephant, one square inch at a time, or maybe you simply feel like you are herding cats.

There are plenty of different ways to catalog loosely associated knowledge of varying complexity—a few months back I discussed using a wiki for this—but some problems just don’t need that level of complexity and depth.

Some problems are more suited to random scribblings on a whiteboard, and that is where mind mapping software comes in.

What’s a Mind Map?

Imagine you and your family are going to fly to Rio de Janeiro this summer to visit distant relatives and you realize that there are about a thousand things to do  in preparation but you just can’t sort it all out.

You know that you need passports and you need to verify that everyone’s visa is still valid. There is the monumental task of deciding what to pack. You might want to make a checklist of places you want to visit. And you want to go hang gliding down to the beach, but there’s something nagging at you about whether or not your health insurance would cover a broken leg in a foreign land.

The problem is that it is difficult to keep the whole thing in your mind—if you concentrate on the luggage, you forget about the international driver’s license.

Mind maps allow you to visualize the whole thing at once, and you can slide stuff around and get it looking nice and pretty.

This is a relatively simple start at a mind map that represents the vacation. These maps are typically read from the top right going clockwise, though many have no specific sequence. In fact, you can do pretty much what you like with a mind map as long as it works for you.

Just Another Outliner?

At first glance these tools look like glorified outlining applications such as OmniOutliner, and they do serve admirably in this respect, but they are so much more. An outline gives you a very easy way to organize topics and thoughts, adding annotations and such along the way, but it isn’t nearly as easy to visualize and nonlinear concepts do not map well to an outline.

Consider the Rio Trip example above—you could put all of that information into an outline, but it would not be nearly as easy to process mentally.

And these mind maps look especially cool in presentations.

Slick Document Generation

Some of the commercial mind mapping products provide pretty good integration with Microsoft Office products.

Some time back, I needed to write up a set of style standards for Oracle’s PL/SQL programming language for our offshore team. Rather than just dive into Word and hope for the best, I used Mind Manager Pro from Mindjet to make the following map:

This tool supported attaching rich text to nodes in the map, so I used these notes to handle the actual code examples.

I was then able to put together a nice Word template that matched our corporate documents and I clicked the Export to MS Word button and had an instant document:

I have also used mind maps to auto-generate PowerPoint slide decks as well. These days I use Mind Manager on a daily basis at the office; it makes a great difference when I am trying to grasp complex topics with lots of strange dangly bits hanging off of the edges.

Nothing New

Mind maps have been around for a long time. A quick search of the ‘Net will show you that mind mapping software is quite plentiful and mature. There are good free products for PC and Mac available and there are many commercial products that take mind mapping a step further, often integrating with Microsoft Office.

Take a look at what Wikipedia has to say about mind mapping. Here’s a post from 43 Folders on the same topic. Peter Russell has useful information as well about them.

I learned about mind mapping from a friend at work who had been using them for years. After seeing him make some quick notes during a meeting, I was sold.

Closing Thoughts

I made the Rio de Janeiro example using XMind, the free “lite” version of XMindPro. This application is pretty full featured for a free basic version—the Pro version adds enterprise features such as import/export and collaboration.

There are XMind versions for Mac, PC, and Linux.

If you are looking for more, all of the commercial products offer a trial period. I use MindJet’s Mind Manager. Be warned, these tools are expensive, just like buying MS Office, but you might just find that they more than make up for their cost with your newly found productivity.

You know the feeling: you are involved in some intractable problem that has all kinds of weird angles and you just can’t get your head around it—perhaps you feel like you are inspecting an elephant, one square inch at a time, or maybe you simply feel like you are herding cats.

There are plenty of different ways to catalog loosely associated knowledge of varying complexity—a few months back I discussed using a wiki for this—but some problems just don’t need that level of complexity and depth.

Some problems are more suited to random scribblings on a whiteboard, and that is where mind mapping software comes in.

A short time back I was asked to serve on a project team that is involved in managing a stream of data going to dozens of downstream systems. Not only is the project massive, but each of these downstream products has its own project team and politics to deal with.

How do you even begin to learn about forty different computer systems? What do you do with all of the odd little tidbits of information that keep flowing in from all sides?

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