Turn Static Reports into Interactive Map Visualizations
If you've ever had to walk a room full of people through a spreadsheet, you already know how quickly it stops making sense to anyone who didn't build it. The numbers are right there, but the moment someone asks where the underperforming locations actually are, or whether there's a pattern to it, the spreadsheet has nothing to offer. It can store the data. It just can't show it.
That's the gap a map fills. With MAPOG, the same CSV you've been emailing around every month can be uploaded onto an interactive Store Mapper, where every outlet gets a marker, a colour, an icon, a description, images, business hours, and a phone number that's clickable right from the map. The report doesn't go away, it just finally has somewhere useful to live.
What Looks Different on a Map
When above-target outlets show up green and below-target ones show up red, you don't need to explain the performance picture to anyone. They can see it. You can add custom icons per category, set labels that surface the details people actually care about, and configure display properties so the right information is always visible without anyone having to dig for it.
The Reason It Sticks
A report gets read once in a meeting and filed. A well-built map gets shared, bookmarked, and referred back to because it keeps making sense every time someone opens it. The data is the same, the difference is just that one of them was built to be understood and the other wasn't.
Retail chains use it to monitor outlet performance without running manual comparisons. Logistics teams use it to spot coverage gaps across a delivery network. Facility managers track inspection status across multiple sites at once. Real estate platforms map listings by price, type, and proximity. Whatever the industry, the moment location data moves from a spreadsheet onto a map, it becomes something a team can actually act on.

















