Effective Planning using Mind Mapping Software

The Common Elements of Planning

It has been said (many times) that "if you fail to plan, you are planning to fail". When you are really working on getting things done, you need solid planning methodologies in place.

This whole section of the NovaMind web site is dedicated to planning. Now some of the things that are in this section may seem to not belong together - like marketing planning and career planning. But when you look at the structure of the information, how it is collected and used, you will see that the concepts are remarkably similar.

The natural layout of Mind Maps ensures that the overall goal is kept in view all the time, and that the main objectives (the first level branches) are always naturally being supported by the sub-branches which break things down into sub-objectives until finally you get to task level.

You can see this pattern in the reverse engineering of career goals, it's there in your business planning, and in all the different planning activities, it is the same underlying structure.

Putting together plans

the planning process

This NovaMind document contains the Mind Maps used on this page.

Brainstorming

The first stage of the planning process is informal, and involves you brainstorming ideas. Many people think of brainstorming as some sort of completely random thing where you just sit down and come up with new ideas. Instead, it is an organized way of generating ideas, which was invented by Alex Osborn.

Brainstorming can be done either individually or in a group. In group brainstorming sessions, participants are encouraged to share their ideas with one another as soon as they are generated. If you have a large group of people, it is often more productive to break the group into smaller sub-groups and either have them all come up with different solutions around the same topic, or break the topic down into different sub-topics and give each group a sub-topic to think about.

The key to brainstorming is not to interrupt the thought process. As ideas come to the mind, they are captured and stimulate the development of better ideas.

In order to enhance creativity, a brainstorming session has four basic rules:

  1. Focus on quantity
    This is so that you get the maximum spread of different ideas. It has the idea of "quantity breeds quality". The greater the number of ideas generated, the greater the chance of hitting upon useful ideas.
  2. Criticism is forbidden
    In a group, it is often emphasized in brainstorming sessions that you should put criticism 'on hold', but the same applies when you are brainstorming on your own. When suspending judgment, you create a supportive atmosphere where participants feel free to generate unusual ideas. This is particularly important in an environment where people know one another and often certain people are more confident and outspoken than others. Removing the fear of criticism can help to build the confidence of less participative people.
  3. Unusual ideas are welcome
    By looking at things from another perspective, or by setting aside assumptions, some unusual ideas can be generated. These ideas will open new ways of working or thinking. It is easier to tame down a wild idea than to think up another completely new idea.
  4. Combine and improve ideas
    The approach of combining and improving ideas leads to better and more complete ideas and will cause a chain reaction of idea generation by using the power of association.

There are a lot of techniques that can be brought to bear on the idea generation phase, and this is an area Edward DeBono has done a lot of study on - we will go into that in more depth in an article purely about brainstorming.

Mind Maps in planning

Fitting the ideas together

As you are generating the ideas, you are just getting them out there - no need to think too much about where they are put on the Mind Map - just get them on there somewhere.

Now you need to organize them, and this is purely a matter of structuring the Mind Map so that the hierarchy is generated. The main objectives go on the first level branches, and then the sub-branches hold the more detailed information. It goes from general to specific. If there are topics that are related to each other in some way outside the hierarchy, you can use either coloring, adornments, or link lines to show these secondary associations.

Culling and Scoping

As you are fitting the ideas together, some of the "off the wall" ideas will probably not fit with the project as it is at the time. So the ideas that really don't fit can be moved to another Mind Map within the same document, or another document altogether - but don't throw them away. You never know when you may find them useful for another brainstorming session or a similar project.

The next step is scoping. Say you are putting together a marketing plan, you are likely to come up with lots of different, workable ideas that you could be doing, but there just aren't enough hours in the day.

A similar concept would apply to project planning where you need to scope the project to something that can be delivered in a reasonable timeframe and within the required budget.

Very often the thing that determines how the scoping happens is the resources available - whether that be time or money or people or machinery etc.

With the hierarchical structure of Mind Maps, it makes it easy to remove a main objective branch with all its sub-branches from the Mind Map, and know that you are not going to be affecting the rest of the plan. Again, these objectives can be kept in another Mind Map, perhaps for a phase 2 of the project or plan.

The Action Plan

In order to accomplish the things you are planning, you need to refine the objectives and tasks to make sure you have the resources available at the right time for each of the tasks, and that the tasks are appropriately prioritized. Again, you can do this in NovaMind to have an action plan all ready to go.

Measurement of the Results and Feedback

An important part of the action plan is to know when you have completed each of the tasks and objectives. You need to include targets for completion, cost, and other resource usage, and measure every consumable aspect of the project (and consumable does include time!). This needs to feed back into the plan, which is a living document, being updated as you go.

The lessons you learn from carrying out the plan need to be recorded so that they can both feed back into that particular plan as it is being executed, and also be used as a resource for more accurately creating realistic plans in the future.

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Testimonials

"Totally Great 2"

I too am developing a film project and have completely fallen in love with NovaMind. It has been a tremendous tool for creating both the film's treatment and Keynote presentation. I was excited to see the Screenwriting Module added with version 2.x. Though I've used Final Draft for years, ever since OS X arrived I've been yearning for someone to write a native/cocoa application for screenwriting and to have it utilize the Services feature of OS X. From my perspective, having the screenwriting integrated with a mind mapping application will just be fantastic! In its initial version the Screenwriting Module has got the basics, and I'm hopeful that it will mature into a Final Draft competitor.

"GPercy" . : Version Tracker


"My students love it and start using it for their other courses as well"

Dear NovaMind,

I have been using NovaMind for 3+ years now and it is my Swiss Army knife. I plan projects, write book chapters, create presentations, and develop courses and workshops with it.

I teach mind mapping in my courses and have had the department license NovaMind for the lab I teach in. My students love it and start using it for their other courses as well. I also teach staff and faculty workshops on mind mapping and the PC users have always been envious of NovaMind (but not for long now...).

Because of my mind mapping evangelism on campus, I have to keep on top of what is out there. That means testing every thing that comes down the pike. No other app has even come close to stealing my heart. The new features of version three have me drooling.

I stumbled across the demo version of Merlin, downloaded the trial, imported one of my NovaMind maps and instantly HAD TO HAVE IT. Thanks for teaming with ProjectWizards and thank you for my truly favorite application. I just can't live without NovaMind... and now... Merlin...

Warmest regards,

Associate Professor of Interactive Digital Design
Quinnipiac University

Pattie Belle Hastings : CT, United States


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