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Experience the power

Get ready to see your data in a whole new way!

Author: Mapline Team

How to Create a Heat Map

What is a heat map and how can it help you dive deeper into your business analytics? A heat map is a color-coded representation of your data. Different color gradients represent various values and ultimately give you a clear snapshot of otherwise complex information. With Mapline, learning how to create a heat map from Excel spreadsheet data is easy. You can find out where customers, sales and marketing opportunities, or distribution centers are concentrated on a map. Follow these 8 simple steps to learn how to create a radial map:
  1. Open your map.
  2. Click the drop-down menu next to your dataset.
  3. Select “Heat Map.”
  4. Select whether you would like to apply the heat the area around the pins or the overlapping radius areas.
  5. Define the radius (i.e. miles or kilometers).
  6. Select whether you would like the heat map to be based on location density or the sum or average of your data.
  7. Click on the “Styling” tab to set the opacity and blur. You can also remove the legend and fade the edges of the heat map.
  8. Click “OK.”

Tips for Choosing a Geographic Heat Map Type

Not sure what type of heat map is best for you? Find out how to create a heat map that’s easy to read and represents your data clearly. Here are two ways you can determine your heat map selection.

1. Areas Around the Pins

Do you need to visualize pockets with high densities of customers? For example, a national textbook retail store may want to analyze neighborhoods within a 20-mile radius from local community colleges and universities. The “areas around pins” option is not only an efficient way to represent this data visually but also provides a big-picture view with a detailed look into large customer accounts or areas where many customers are located.

2. Overlapping Radius Areas

Are you a business that performs disaster recovery? Or, maybe you’re a planner scoping out your next office location or distribution center site. With the “overlapping radius areas” feature in Mapline, you can use heat mapping to visualize high-risk areas, report on performance by geographic areas, and choose optimal sites for anything from seminars and conferences to retail stores and more.

Start Building Radial Heat Maps With Mapline

Make data analysis simple by using a color gradient to contrast densely populated areas with less populated areas. Whether your dataset is customers, retail sites, location opportunities, competitors, or something else—you can create a clear picture. Ready to get started? Explore our plans and pricing. Or, contact us to learn more about how to create a geographic heat map and move your business insights forward.

Benefits of Petroleum and Pipeline GIS

Mapping and spatial analysis are increasingly essential components to the oil and gas industry. Decision-makers, planners and crew in the field can leverage geographic information in every phase of the extraction and delivery process. Here are three top ways GIS mapping and spatial analytics influence the oil and gas sector.

1. Oil and Gas Site Selection

GIS is a valuable tool for oil and gas site selection because it gives decision-makers a way to visually evaluate topography, geology, and analyze surface drilling constraints. With GIS mapping, companies and field operators can also overlay high-resolution imagery on site maps to assist with project selections and surveys.

How to Create a Map of Business Locations

Choosing and monitoring business locations requires research, data and visibility. Jumpstart your own business location analysis when you leverage Mapline’s easy-to-use mapping tools. Need to map multiple locations on a map? No problem. Whether you need to plot potential retail sites, competitor locations or anything in between, Mapline is here to help.  Follow these 8 steps to learn how to map multiple locations on a map:

How to Create a Territory Map

Territory mapping brings your data to life—whether your boundary lines are by state, county, zip code, area code or something in between. When you visualize your data, you can uncover geographic trends affecting your business. Clear, easy-to-read visualizations ensure you always have a pulse on insights. Ready to take your spreadsheet data to the next level with Mapline? Follow these 8 simple steps to learn how to create a territory map:

How 3 Manufacturers Drive Growth with GIS Mapping

What do General Motors, Nike, Samsung and Walmart have in common? Beyond their global status on the manufacturing stage, these companies leverage GIS technology to outpace competitors, reduce risk and uncover customer needs. Learn how analyzing markets and territories can lead to business success and innovation. Check out three companies who use geospatial analysis to drive informed decisions every day.

1. Interstate Batteries Reduces Costs and Improves Delivery

How to Create a Map

Maps empower us to see the world—and our data—with fresh eyes and an open mind. Whether you need to map geographic data to perform high level marketing analyses, plan an optimized sales route or anything in between, Mapline has simple tools for the job.