“You closed the tab. Your map didn’t.” We see it all day: a busy planner starts a mind map, then life happens—switches from desktop to phone, grabs a meeting note, and jumps right back in. Flowodo keeps up with you: Auto-save so your ideas don’t vanish Undo/redo for quick
corrections without starting over Cloud access so your map stays synced across web + mobile Watch an AI mind map get built in seconds, then keep editing from another device—no scramble, no rework. No login required → Try it instantly #MindMapping#Productivity#AItools
seconds, the structure and connectors re-align so your map stays coherent—before you even second-guess the layout. Try it instantly — No signup required → #MindMapping#AITools#Productivity#VisualThinking Made with ❤️ for visual thinkers.
Stop tidying your map—drag once, then stitch. We see it all the time: you move a cluster under the right parent… then your connectors look messy, and the whole map feels “rearranged,” not planned. In Flowodo, we drag for speed, pause for a beat, and let AI do the stitching. In
seconds, the structure and connectors re-align so your map stays coherent—before you even second-guess the layout. Try it instantly — No signup required → #MindMapping#AITools#Productivity#VisualThinking Made with ❤️ for visual thinkers.
Stop tidying your map—drag once, then stitch. We see it all the time: you move a cluster under the right parent… then your connectors look messy, and the whole map feels “rearranged,” not planned. In Flowodo, we drag for speed, pause for a beat, and let AI do the stitching. In
Your notes don’t feel “wrong”—they just don’t help when it’s quiz time. We use a “Read-to-Map” strategy in class: after students finish a short article, they paste 5–10 key sentences into Flowodo and the AI generates a mind map. Then students verify it by dragging/collapsing
nodes into 3 categories: Main claim Evidence Implications Finally, they share the map link with their study group—so discussion turns into evidence-backed corrections, not a notes dump. What node would you delete or add to make this argument stronger? Start Mapping Free →
Your notes don’t feel “wrong”—they just don’t help when it’s quiz time. We use a “Read-to-Map” strategy in class: after students finish a short article, they paste 5–10 key sentences into Flowodo and the AI generates a mind map. Then students verify it by dragging/collapsing
nodes into 3 categories: Main claim Evidence Implications Finally, they share the map link with their study group—so discussion turns into evidence-backed corrections, not a notes dump. What node would you delete or add to make this argument stronger? Start Mapping Free →
Meeting notes chaos again? Paste the messy transcript… then watch Flowodo map the decisions before you lose the thread. Try this “meeting notes → decision map” flow: 1) Paste your notes into Flowodo and let the AI generate a starter mind map. 2) Do a 3-step cleanup focused on
Meeting notes chaos again? Paste the messy transcript… then watch Flowodo map the decisions before you lose the thread. Try this “meeting notes → decision map” flow: 1) Paste your notes into Flowodo and let the AI generate a starter mind map. 2) Do a 3-step cleanup focused on
Meeting notes chaos again? Paste the messy transcript… then watch Flowodo map the decisions before you lose the thread. Try this “meeting notes → decision map” flow: 1) Paste your notes into Flowodo and let the AI generate a starter mind map. 2) Do a 3-step cleanup focused on
Meeting notes chaos again? Paste the messy transcript… then watch Flowodo map the decisions before you lose the thread. Try this “meeting notes → decision map” flow: 1) Paste your notes into Flowodo and let the AI generate a starter mind map. 2) Do a 3-step cleanup focused on
Meeting notes chaos again? Paste the messy transcript… then watch Flowodo map the decisions before you lose the thread. Try this “meeting notes → decision map” flow: 1) Paste your notes into Flowodo and let the AI generate a starter mind map. 2) Do a 3-step cleanup focused on
That goal you “decided” on—? You don’t need more motivation. You need a Decision Map for the next 30 days. We’ve seen this false-start pattern way too often: everyone agrees on the goal, then nobody agrees on what they’re assuming, what could break, and what they’ll actually
test. In Flowodo, we ask the mind map to branch into: Assumptions → Risks → Experiments (for the next 30 days) → Then we share it with the team so decisions get crisp: What we’ll try What we’ll stop What we’ll measure Try it instantly—No signup required → #MindMapping