Our Docs

Our Docs

Did You Know?

Paradigms are like lenses: shift them, and suddenly new patterns come into focus. That’s the power of Social System Mapping.

It Takes a Social System to Map a Social System

Estimated reading: 7 minutes 44 views Contributors

✨ It Needs to Be a True Collaboration

Social System Mapping is more of an art than a science. It’s the art of process — one that begins by understanding the purpose and aims of a collaborative, action-oriented, or intentional network. From there, it’s about learning what kinds of relational and systemic awareness might help the network see itself more clearly, so it can learn and act together with greater coherence.

Then comes the craft of translation — distilling those needs all the way down into spreadsheets and data flows, designing questions that will gather the right information, and ultimately creating a map that’s not just a diagram, but a shared space for insight and conversation. Something we can look at together, explore, tell stories through, and derive meaning from.

This is a process that spans a wide range of mental skills — and most of us don’t possess all of them.

Most of the time, creating a truly useful Social System Map requires a minimum of four different kinds of thinkers. We call these the Thinking Hats.

  • One listens and inspires — drawing out people’s imaginations and intuiting what kind of information might help a community grow. This is an imaginative, people-y, connective kind of thinker. We call this Hat the Visionary. The Visionary generates energy and possibility before there’s anything to look at.
  • One navigates the technical tools — setting up interfaces, shaping data flows, solving problems with systems logic. This is a tech-y, detail-savvy, implementation-focused kind of thinker. We call this Hat the Technician. The Technician takes the energy generated by the Visionary and translates it into something tangible — something the rest of us can see.
  • One brings systems thinking and inquiry into play — asking deep questions, noticing patterns, helping others make meaning from the map once it’s created. This is a conceptual, teacher-y, pattern-seeking kind of thinker. We call this Hat the SenseMaker. The SenseMaker helps the network reflect, learn, and make better choices using the map we can now explore together.
  • And one bridges them all — helping the community stay connected to why the map matters, surfacing insights in ways that resonate, and rippling meaning in and out of the network. This is a connective, reframing, meaning-weaving kind of thinker. We call this Hat the StoryTeller. The StoryTeller is present at every stage — inviting people in, reflecting back what’s emerging, and helping others find their way in.

Of course, there are more than four kinds of thinkers. Many other ways of thinking contribute to good mapping work. But in our experience, without at least these four orientations in the mix, a project tends to falter. The potential it holds remains unrealized.

And it’s rare — really rare — for one person to be strong in all four areas. Even I (Christine), who often have to wear all the Hats at once, find it hard to perceive and process well from more than one of them at a time. If I’m not clear about which Hat I need to be wearing in a given moment, I can find myself spinning in circles. It’s part of why Social System Mapping is inherently, and inevitably, collaborative.

You may have noticed that the Hats correspond roughly with the three phases of mapping — Envisioning, Mapping, and SenseMaking (or more simply, Before, During, After). And while they’re all involved throughout, each phase emphasizes a different Hat. Each phase is best led by someone whose strength aligns with its focus.

These Hats — these roles — also require different kinds of knowledge and attention. And in the name of true collaboration, where each person brings their own strength to the table without needing to master everyone else’s domain, we’ve structured this knowledge base to align with the Thinking Hats.

So as you dig in, try to notice which Hat you’re wearing. Let that guide where you begin — and what you look for.

🎩 Key Driving Roles — or “Thinking Hats”

Whether they’re filled by one person or shared across a group, a strong mapping project requires someone to take responsibility for each of the following roles:

🟣 Visionary

Catalyzes the mapping process by helping others see its potential — before there’s anything to look at. Guides purpose, gathers people, inspires the process forward.

🔵 Technician

Takes member lists and survey designs and turns them into a functioning interface in sumApp. Translates data from sumApp into a meaningful, interactive Kumu map.

🟢 SenseMaker

Helps the community read and learn from the map. Brings systems awareness, asks useful questions, and helps turn visuals into shared understanding.

🟡 StoryTeller

Bridges all phases and roles. Helps people stay connected to the why, reflects what’s emerging, translates between Hats, and connects the process to the broader network’s story.


👥 Other Key Roles

Ambassadors / Advocates

Visionaries need others to envision with. Members of the network need to feel part of the process. Many successful projects gather a subgroup — sometimes called Ambassadors, Pilot-Testers, Design Team, or Advocates — to help shape the survey, offer feedback, and encourage participation.

You might convene them for a group session (once or repeatedly), or engage them one-on-one. It all depends on your network’s size, energy, and context.

Diversity matters here. You can’t surface the needs of the whole if you’re only hearing from a few familiar voices. But if fanfare is hard to generate — don’t worry. Start with who’s willing. Iterate from there.

Network Members

You can’t map much without participation. You have to consider the value to members at every stage. Start with those who are interested. Run a pilot. Create a prototype. Let people see themselves in the early map — and enlist them in spreading the word.

Once you have a map, invite others to make sense of it with you. That kicks off the next iteration. And the cycle begins again.

🌱 The Opportunity

A Social System Map is more than a tool — it’s a practice. It gives us a chance to work across real difference. Not just demographic or ideological difference — but cognitive difference. The Hats represent different languages, different strengths, different ways of making meaning.

In network-weaving spaces, we talk a lot about the importance of bridging across difference. But we still tend to gravitate toward people who think like we do. And that can make true collaboration difficult — especially when our thinking styles start to bump into each other.

I used to say that my job was to translate the infinite, abstract, non-linear, multi-dimensional longings of Visionaries into the finite, structured, single-dimensional bits and bytes of computer logic — so the Technicians had tools to work with — and then translate that structure back out again into abstract, interactive visuals that allow people to see what they couldn’t see before.

That meant learning to navigate four wildly different languages, all at once.

The hardest part was that most people didn’t realize those other languages existed. They assumed their way of thinking was the only one in play — the only one that mattered. The mental load of translating constantly, without acknowledgment, could get heavy. And sometimes, I got cranky.

But here’s the gift:
This work can be a powerful practice — if you let it.
It invites you to slow down. To ask better questions. To listen more deeply. To become clearer, more transparent, more curious.
It teaches you to co-create from difference.

I love that you can’t do this alone.
I love that it demands we stretch, together.
I love that it makes us more than the sum of our parts.

Leave a Comment

Share this Doc

It Takes a Social System to Map a Social System

Or copy link

CONTENTS

My Account and Billing

Article 8: Containers, Differences, Exchanges

Article 7: Pattern Spotting

This is the seventh article in my 8-week series exploring foundational systems t

Article 6: Attending to Our Attention

This is the sixth article in my 8-week series exploring foundational systems thi

Article 4: The Stacey Matrix

Understanding Contexts for Creating Generative Conditions This is the fourth art

Using the ‘Send me my link form’

This article walks through what to do if a map member loses their personal sumAp

Article 5: Navigating Complexity — The HSD Theory of Change

As mappers, we’re always grappling with complexity. Networks don’t behave like m

Article 3: Complex Adaptive Systems: Patterns & Paradigms Naturally Shifting

Why do systems revert to old patterns even after successful change efforts? The

Article 2: Systems Thinking and Paradigms

Why does change feel so elusive, even when there's abundant good will? The answe

Article 1: Systems Thinking Starts in Our Minds

Why do we get stuck even when our hearts are in the right place? Systems thinkin

Deepen Your Systems Practice — Systems Thinking Academy for sumApp Users

Working on a social system mapping project? The technical aspects of using sumAp

Systems Thinking Trail Guide Series

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Social System Mapping? Social System Mapping is an expanded version of N

Recently Updated: The Living Trail

Been here before? Welcome back, map-walker. This page is your compass for what’s

sumApp Overview

If you’d like a little orientation to sumApp, this 57 second video should help!

Networkism – The New Cultural Meme

In a March 2015 TED Talk, data visualization researcher Manual Lima explores wha

Intro to project set-up

Envisioning

Project Data-Management

Project Launch

Project Set-Up

Principles

Four Hats

Account Info

Intro to Social System Mapping

Pre-existing Data

Define Settings

Time Tags

Add Members

Manage Invitations

Define Email Templates

Manage Members

Define Opt-In Form

Intro to Mapping

Designing the Input Tools

The Advocates

Sharing the Vision

Edit Connection Options

Edit Survey Form

Import Connections

Intro to Data Management

The Storytelling Hat: Weaving Meaning Throughout the Mapping Project

The Storytelling Hat is worn across the whole Social System Mapping journey — fr

Member Views

Accounts and Tiers

Intro to sumApp

SenseMaking

Kumu

Getting Started

sumApp

Intro to Social System Mapping

Mapping

Envisioning

Getting Started

SenseMaking

We Made a Social System Map – Now What Do We Do With It? Social System Mapping e

Adding Pre-existing Data: Preliminaries

A preliminary video on what to expect when adding pre-existing data to a sumApp

Opt In Form

Are you starting a new mapping project? The Opt In Form is one way to help get n

Intro to Member Views

The Member View is the interface that your members will engage with. You – as th

StoryTelling

This article is in \’placeholder\’ phase. If you need this info soon, please put

sumApp Member View | Map Page

The Map Page allows you to embed your Kumu map back into the sumApp interface. T

Importing Connections from Another Project | Tier IV

Many of our customers work with different networks that have overlapping members

The Status Report

The ‘Status Report’ in sumApp helps you access a CSV file with all of your map m

How To Insert The Live JSON Link Into Kumu

How To Add “Relative” Links To Views In The Side Panel

An Absolute link is a full URL:  https://kumu.io/HSDInstitute/hsdnetwork#home/in

How the Segments Work in the Members Connections View

sumApp Member View | Survey Page

The member view survey page is almost completely defined in the Survey Editor. F

Approaches to Mapping People AND Organizations

A network is often made up of a combination of organizations and individuals – w

Understanding Your Data Flow Options

sumApp is a tool designed to GATHER your network data in an easy, user-friendly

Download Data

This article is in \’placeholder\’ phase. If you need this info soon, please put

Data-Flow Option #3) Link Into a Google Sheet then Link Google Sheet into Kumu

If you want to incorporate data gathered from sources other than sumApp, or make

Accounts Needed for Social System Mapping

Social System Mapping involves the use of two online platforms, sumApp and Kumu.

Map Literacy – Example #1

Just to see what I mean by mapping being a ‘language’ – watch this one minute .g

Networkism – The New Cultural Meme

In a March 2015 TED Talk, data visualization researcher Manual Lima explores wha

It’s a New Language That is Emerging

I like to say that Social System Mapping is one genre in a new visual language t

It Takes a Social System to Map a Social System

Social System Mapping is an art of collaborative process — requiring at least fo

The SenseMaker Hat

Isn’t SenseMaking the Same as Envisioning? Not at all! People often think of vis

The Technician Hat

Is Technician The Role You Fill In AN SSM? The Technician or Technicians are gen

The Four Mapping ‘Hats’

A Social System Mapping project thrives when four Thinking Hats are present: Vis

The Visionary Hat

Are You An SSM Visionary? The person or persons wearing the Visionary hat are ge

sumApp Pricing Table

  Tier I   Tier II   Tier III*   Tier IV*   Cost Monthly Annual Monthly Annual M

sumApp Features by Tier

Tier I – free Up to 3 projects| max 1,500 people/project Kumu-Ready data structu

How To Upgrade Your Account

If you already have a sumApp account (including an old trial that has been downg

Cancelling Your Account or Downgrading to Tier I

All sumApp account set-ups start at Tier II for a free trial month. No credit ca

The ‘Meet Them Where They’re At’ Principle

This is related to the Show Don’t Persuade principle, and it’s about not stressi

Understanding the Relationship Between sumApp and Kumu

Kumu is an online platform that visualizes data in network graph format.  A pers

Member Views and Admin Views

Just as with most survey tools – sumApp has two layers of users who engage with

How to Start Mapping – Create a Pilot/Prototype Map

Social System Mapping means that: All of this makes it hard to know where to sta

How to Merge a Member with Multiple Profiles into a Single Profile

Data-Flow Option #1) Download to Desktop – Upload to Kumu

When we first developed sumApp, this was the only way to get data into Kumu. We’

Data-Flow Option #2) Live Link from sumApp to Kumu

This is by far the simplest and most popular option among sumApp users.  Read ab

Introduction to The sumApp Data Management Tab

The sumApp Data Management Tab enables you to: The Three Ways of Getting Your Da

Using the Graph Commons data output

sumApp now works with both Kumu AND Graph Commons! Graph Commons is an Open Sour

How to Hide sumApp Fields in Kumu

The Envisioning Phase

The Envisioning Phase simply means – everything that needs to happen to get a pr

The Advocate Team

In an ideal world, there would be a core group of early adopters – advocates – i

sumApp Content Development

There are 7 content items that the Visionaries/Advocates should provide to the T

Turning Data-Flows Into a Practice

Moving data around is by far the most confusing, time-consuming, mind-numbing pa

The Mapping Phase: Wearing the Technician Hat

The Mapping Phase is where vision takes shape. Wearing the Technician Hat means

The Project List

Project List Page The project list gives you an overview of your projects and ac

Social System Mapping Principles

The original network visualization tools (as well as, perhaps, the underlying sc

The ‘Show Don’t Persuade’ Principle

One of my first insights into this kind of project is that ‘network mapping’ or

Impact on Survey When Loading Pre-Existing Data | Tiers III & IV

Tiers III & IV enable you to incorporate data about your members that you’ve

The Create Survey Workspace

Tiers II, III & IV include a survey / member profile.  You customize your su

How to Re-Order Your Survey Question Options (temporary work-around available in Tiers III & IV only)

There’s one place where sumApp is not yet as flexible as it should be, if we’re

Tier Differences in The Survey Builder

The Survey Editor will be slightly different, depending on which Tier you’ve sub

Changing Survey Questions and Options

sumApp was designed to enable you to test, reflect, learn, adapt and iterate thr

Custom Survey Filter | Tier IV

Sometimes the segment filter on the connections page just isn’t enough. Your pop

Planning for Kumu When Defining Field Types

Most surveys aren’t designed with complex data-visualization in mind, so even pe

Connection Options | Tiers I & II

You can change your options in Setup > Define connection options  – #1 &

Understanding Connections in the Social System Mapping Context

The Connections Page of the Member View represents the key functionality of sumA

sumApp Member View | Bio Page

The Bio page is the first page your members will see when the click on the link

sumApp Member View | Connections Page

Purpose of the Connections Page The Connections Page represents sumApp’s core fu

Understanding sumApp Tiers

Our initial intention when creating sumApp – in addition to creating the tool we

How To Transfer A Project To Another User

If you need to transfer a project to another user, we can do that for you. To do

Survey Field Types

Types of fields available in the survey 1) Text input. Open ended short text fie

How To Load Pre-Existing Data Into sumApp | Tiers III & IV

What Is ‘Pre-Existing’ Data? Pre-existing data is information about your members

Adding Members With Pre-Existing Data

Tiers I and II only allow you to load the core fields necessary for sumApp to fu

The ‘Data That Makes a Difference’ Principle

I stole this phrase from Michael Quinn Patton’s upcoming book ‘Blue Marble Evalu

The Sensitizing Principle

A social system map can instigate lot’s of great actions. A social system map ca

Understanding your map embed options

Now that you can use sumApp with two different platforms, we figured you’d want

How to Change the Date Format in Excel to a Different Locale Other than English (USA)

Link for Walk-through Method 1: How to change the Date Format in Excel Link for

Instructions for Using Tim’s Header Maker – Simplified Version

Instructions for Tim’s Header MakerSimplified VersionMar 25, 2024 Video Tutorial

Instructions for Using Tim’s Header Maker Part 2

Instructions for Tim’s Header MakerPublic Full VersionJul 25, 2024 Video Tutoria

Multi-Modal Connection Option Field Types | Tiers III & IV

Most of the connection field types are identical to the survey field types, but

The Define Connection Options Workspace | Tiers III & IV

Defining connection options in Tiers III & IV is very similar to setting up

Understanding and Preparing the Three Email Template Types

Why have three templates? sumApp was designed to be what we call ‘evergreen’ – i

Project Settings

Settings for all Tiers The aspects of the Member Views (outside of the survey an

How to Add the Kumu Embed Link Into sumApp

Once your map is ready to share, you can put the Kumu embed link to show it with

Introduction to Project Setup

The project setup tabs are how you access everything related to customizing your

Understanding the URL field on the Bio page

Graph Commons, just like Kumu, is fussy about how your data is structured (hence

The Three General Phases

Social System Mapping unfolds in three fluid, overlapping phases — Envisioning,

What is Social System Mapping?

Social System Mapping is an expanded version of Network Mapping that is emerging

The Purpose of Social System Mapping

Social system mapping (SSM) is a new mapping practice that can present on the su

Video of a Social System Mapping Presentation to the Blue Marble Evaluation Network

Sarah Shanahan of the RE-AMP Network and I recently had the honor of presenting

Why think about each phase separately?

A guide to starting your Social System Mapping journey with small, intentional s

sumApp Overview

sumApp Overview If you’d like a little orientation to sumApp, this 57 second vid

Chat Icon Close Icon

Subscribe

×
Cancel