Pages in this section:
This section
1️⃣ Section 1: Getting started
🆕 What is new
🆘 Getting help
➡ Causal mapping
🗺 Causal maps
✅❌ Pros and cons
🧮 Coding with Excel
💻 What you need
📲 Signing up
👤 Account
👭 Received a share?
🕑 First 5 minutes
👩💻 Coding
🌗 Statements Filters
💬 The Statements panel
🌓 Transforms
✨ Applying Filters
🗺️ Vignette
🗺️ The Map
📊 Tables
📂 Files
🧾 Account tab
👉 Interface tips
All sections:
📚 Are Causal Map and causal mapping for you?
So, you’re getting excited about creating maps – but is your project right for it?
✅ Use Causal Map if you:
- have a relatively large amount of narrative data (enough to provide at least 20-30 causal links)
- need help to organise a large number of links and summarise them into an overview or synthesis
- have information from more than one source (for example different respondents, different documents, or different places in one document) and the information about the source is important to you: they aren’t all interchangeable
- are interested in possible differences between the sources and groups of sources – and/or you don’t necessarily have a preconceived idea of the contents or boundaries of the map
- want to capture what your sources actually say, systematically and transparently
❌ Causal Map map is not suitable if you:
- only have a relatively small map which you can manage with traditional tools for drawing network diagrams (e.g. PowerPoint, kumu.io etc.)
- need to analyse quantitative data and/or need to do precise mathematical modelling, e.g. of future states of a system under certain conditions
- would like to sketch out a plan (e.g. Theory of Change or similar) without much reference to the different sources underpinning each link