Scapple is a mind-map and note taking software. It is made by Literature & Latte, the people who made the highly respected Scrivener. Both Scapple and Scrivener can be downloaded for a free trial.
I have never been someone that finds mind mapping useful and originally looked at the software as a useful program for making resources for my students. Scapple is both incredibly simple and flexible. It is this flexibility that makes it so useful for a whole array of applications.
Scapple has been compared to a blank sheet of paper or a whiteboard. Scapple allows the user to put notes, images and connections on this paper and arrange as they find helpful. To give you an idea, I used Scapple to outline the features of the Internet Business Handbook. This is what I came up with:
Scapple works by:
- double clicking anywhere to insert a note. This can be repeated and the notes arranged by dragging and dropping. Some people use Scapple, in this way as a virtual brainstorming platform.
- drag one note to another to make a connection. The note will spring back, to the original position and a connection, with a dotted line, made between them.
- hold down the alt key (option and command keys on a Mac) while you drag to create an arrow between the notes.
- images and external text can be pasted in.
- double click a link to add a note between the two linked notes.
- borders can be added to notes, as well as colors. Custom note-styles in the format menu are easy to make and delete. If you have a number of notes that you want formatted in the same way, then select all of them before formatting.
- URLs in Scapple are clickable.
Once finished the Scapple document can be exported in .pdf or .jpg forms.
So, Scapple is a quick, powerful tool to organize your ideas. However, care must be taken not to spend too much time making your mind-map a masterpiece. Your masterpiece should be your product not the mind-map you used along the way.
Why not leave a comment about how you use Scapple or any tips that you have found helpful?