Mohiomap

Mohiomap

closed

A Visual Analytics tool for content stored in Dropbox, Box, Evernote, and Google Drive.

HQ location
Auckland, New Zealand
Website
Launch date
Employees
Enterprise value
$2—4m
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DateInvestorsAmountRound
investor

€0.0

round
investor

€0.0

round

$590k

Seed
Total Funding000k
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More about Mohiomap
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Mohiomap, operating under the parent company Mohio, was established in Auckland, New Zealand, in 2012 by founder Christian Hirsch. The company secured $100,000 in a single Seed funding round on November 30, 2012, with participation from investors including New Zealand Growth Capital Partners, Sparkbox Venture Group, and Global from Day One. Tracxn data indicates the company is now deadpooled.

Mohiomap functioned as a visual analytics and productivity tool designed to help individuals and teams visualize and organize their data stored across various cloud platforms. Initially launched as a visualization tool for Evernote, it later expanded its integrations to include Dropbox, Google Drive, and Box. The service was aimed at users who store significant amounts of information in the cloud and needed a way to uncover patterns, identify hidden connections, and better manage their digital files. The platform operated as a web application, with a freemium model where core features were free, and a premium version offered advanced analytics.

The core of Mohiomap's service was its ability to transform the data within a user's cloud account into an interactive, mind map-style visualization. This force-directed graph presented items like notes, notebooks, tags, and files as nodes, allowing users to see relationships and hierarchies that are not apparent in traditional list-based file explorers. Users could navigate this visual map, click on nodes to preview or open files, and filter content by age. A key feature was the ability to manually create connections between different notes and files across integrated services, effectively building a personal knowledge graph. For teams, the product offered features to visualize shared content, create team reports, and analyze group activity to improve workflow and communication.

Keywords: visual analytics, data visualization, mind mapping, cloud data management, knowledge management, Evernote, Dropbox, Google Drive, file organization, productivity tool, information visualization, Christian Hirsch, interactive network, content navigation, team collaboration, deadpooled, Auckland, New Zealand, cloud storage visualization, personal knowledge base

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