What AI adds
AI is useful at the first step: finding themes, grouping related ideas, and surfacing open questions. DeeplyClear uses that structure as a starting point, not as the final answer.
A summary can tell you what was said. A map helps you see how the parts relate.
Best inputs for AI mapping
AI works best when the input contains real context.
- Meeting notes
- Research notes
- Long conversations
- Articles
- Customer interviews
- Product specs
- Support transcripts
Map, then understand
The point is not only to make a diagram. Once the map exists, you can see what you think, where the gaps are, and how to explain the idea with a Clarity Tour.
What you get
What AI can structure first
AI is most useful for turning rough input into a first map you can review, correct, and explain.
- Topic clusters
- Hidden themes
- Repeated ideas
- Dependencies
- Gaps
- Presentation path
FAQ
Common questions
What is an AI mind map generator?
An AI mind map generator turns text into a visual map by identifying themes, relationships, decisions, risks, and open questions. DeeplyClear then lets you edit and present that structure.
Can AI generate a mind map from messy notes?
Yes. Messy notes are a good starting point if they contain enough context. AI can produce the first structure, then you can refine labels, relationships, and missing details.
Do I still control the final map?
Yes. AI helps create the first draft, but the map remains editable. You can rename nodes, merge ideas, change relationships, add context, and create a Clarity Tour.
What makes DeeplyClear different from a basic generator?
DeeplyClear focuses on map plus explanation. The map shows the structure, and the Clarity Tour gives someone a guided path through the reasoning.
Why use a mind map instead of an AI summary?
A summary makes long text shorter, but it is still linear. A mind map helps reveal themes, relationships, dependencies, risks, and open questions so you can understand the shape of the material.
Next step
Use this workflow in DeeplyClear
Turn notes, docs, prompts, or product thinking into a map you can inspect, refine, and explain.