fig. 01Text to infographic

Free mind map maker

Brainstorm, study, plan, and organize complex topics as a radial map with branches and clear labels.

Style

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fig. 03How it works

How it works

From a sentence to a finished infographic in three steps.

  1. 01

    Describe

    Write what you want in plain language — the topic, the facts, the vibe.

  2. 02

    Generate

    Get a polished infographic in about a minute, in the aspect ratio you picked.

  3. 03

    Refine

    Change colors, wording, or layout with simple instructions — every version is kept.

fig. 04Make the format work harder

Make the format work harder

A mind map maker is useful when the topic is connected but not linear. It helps with studying, brainstorming, product planning, content outlines, workshop notes, research summaries, and strategy sessions. Start with one central concept, then list the main branches. Each branch should represent a category, not a sentence: audience, channels, risks, examples, vocabulary, timeline, or next actions.

The best mind maps have balance. Four to seven branches usually read better than twelve. Give each branch two or three supporting nodes, and ask for curved lines, compact labels, and one small icon per branch if the topic benefits from visual memory cues. If the subject is academic, ask for hierarchy and definitions. If it is a planning session, ask for priorities and action-oriented labels.

Use edits to turn a brainstorm into a useful reference. After the first map, remove duplicate branches, merge weak categories, and make the central idea more specific. You can also ask for more white space, a calmer palette, or stronger branch grouping. Iteration matters because a mind map should reduce mental load, not become a decorated version of scattered notes. For workshops, ask for action branches after the idea branches so the map leads somewhere. For study guides, ask the generator to group related facts and put definitions closest to the center. The best result is easy to redraw from memory. If two branches compete for the same meaning, merge them and use subnodes for nuance. Give branch names nouns, not full sentences. Keep examples brief too.

fig. 05Questions about this format

Questions about this format

Make your first infographic

Describe an idea, generate it in about a minute, and refine it until it looks exactly right.