Feb 22 2006
How I use MindManager
MindManager is a great tool that I have been using for about 3 years, I routinely create Mind Maps of books that I read by jotting down key ideas and concepts on a folded A4 sheet of paper that I use as a bookmark. A recent book summary that I generated captured a bit of interest and this review by Marc is particularly interesting, as he describes how he uses MindManager to achieve similar objectives:
I tend to map almost everything from meetings and presentations to project plans. Mapping a book requires a different approach than scribbling notes in the margin. It’s one of the great applications I’ve discovered for the Tablet PC and is possible because MindManager, the mapping program I use, is so well designed for the Tablet. I keep the Tablet next to me in slate mode (screen only) and jot down key points, interesting quotes (with page citations), and summary lists as I work my way through the text. I create a new branch for each chapter and always add a narrative summary in a note attached to the main node for that chapter after I’ve completed reading it.
Marc’s insights prompted me to share a few of the ways in which I use MindManager. I often use it when I am hosting a web conference, I share MindManager and use it to make notes, this note taking model is much better than conventional serial note taking for the following reasons:
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The resulting notes reflect the outcome of the meeting much more accurately than serial notes, which represent the progress of the meeting. For example I often find that a particular topic of discussion is returned to – and refined – many times in the meeting, in serial notes these contributions are scattered throughout the record, in a Mind Map they are all logically grouped under the correct topic.
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Its really easy to restructure the map as our understanding of a topic evolves
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The whole scope of the discussion is always visible, so it helps people to remember the context for any particular discussion.
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The hierarchical structure of the map helps people who would otherwise loose track of what is being discussed and how it relates to other areas of the discussion.
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Supporting material can easily be pasted in the the Mind Map as notes or links, without creating clutter that obscures the key points.
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The resulting map is often a great start point for a really useful post meeting deliverable. I often take the Mind Map and tidy it up after the meeting, add a few graphics and then send it out for review, or re-purpose it by exporting it as a Word document, or Project Plan.
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The volume of screen updates sent to web conference participants is very low, so its much easier for participants to watch than when someone is paging up and down in a word document for example.
Here is an example Map that I produced following a meeting where we were discussing Web 2.0
