Turn Any Article into Flashcards, Mind Maps, or Study Guides
Discover how 5MinRead marketplace presets transform articles into flashcards, mind maps, study guides, and cheat sheets for faster learning.
You just read a 3,000-word article about distributed systems. You understood it in the moment. Two weeks later, you remember almost nothing. This is not a personal failing — it is how human memory works. We forget roughly 70% of new information within 24 hours unless we actively process it.
The fix is not reading more carefully. It is transforming what you read into a format that forces active recall. That is exactly what 5MinRead’s marketplace presets do. Instead of generating a standard summary, they reshape article content into flashcards, mind maps, study guides, and other learning formats — automatically.
The Marketplace Presets for Learning
The 5MinRead preset marketplace includes several formats designed specifically for learning and retention. Here are the four most powerful ones.
Flash Cards
The Flash Cards preset extracts key concepts from an article and formats them as question-answer pairs. Open any article, select the Flash Cards preset, and you get output like:
Q: What is the CAP theorem in distributed systems? A: The CAP theorem states that a distributed system can only guarantee two of three properties simultaneously: Consistency, Availability, and Partition tolerance.
Q: Why do most modern distributed databases choose AP over CP? A: Most web applications prioritize availability and partition tolerance because brief inconsistencies are more acceptable than downtime for end users.
The AI identifies the core concepts, formulates questions that test understanding (not just recall), and provides concise answers. A typical article generates 8 to 15 flashcards depending on its density.
Best for: Exam preparation, learning technical concepts, memorizing terminology in a new field.
Study Guide
The Study Guide preset organizes an article’s content into a structured learning document with:
- Key concepts listed with brief definitions
- Main arguments broken down step by step
- Important relationships between ideas
- Common misconceptions the article addresses
- Review questions to test your understanding
Think of it as the study sheet you would create yourself, except it takes 10 seconds instead of 30 minutes.
Best for: Academic reading, professional development courses, onboarding into a new domain.
Mind Map
The Mind Map preset creates a text-based hierarchical map of the article’s ideas. It identifies the central theme, branches into major subtopics, and shows how supporting details connect to each branch. The output looks like:
Central Theme: The Future of Remote Work
├── Economic Impact
│ ├── Reduced office costs (30-40% savings)
│ ├── Geographic salary arbitrage
│ └── New spending patterns in suburban areas
├── Productivity Research
│ ├── Stanford study: 13% productivity increase
│ ├── Microsoft study: collaboration decline
│ └── Conflicting data on creative work
├── Cultural Challenges
│ ├── Onboarding new employees
│ ├── Maintaining company culture
│ └── Combating isolation
Seeing the structure makes it immediately clear how ideas relate to each other — something that is hard to grasp from linear text.
Best for: Understanding complex topics with many interconnected parts, preparing presentations, getting a bird’s-eye view before deep reading.
Cheat Sheet
The Cheat Sheet preset strips an article down to its most essential, actionable information. No context, no nuance, just the facts and figures you need to reference quickly:
- Key statistics and data points
- Step-by-step procedures
- Important names, dates, and figures
- Decision criteria and thresholds
- Formulas or rules mentioned
Best for: Quick reference material, meeting preparation, keeping essential facts at your fingertips during a project.
How Students Actually Use These
The Research Paper Workflow
Graduate students have told us about a workflow that saves them hours per week:
- First pass: Use the standard summary preset to decide if a paper is relevant to their research
- Deep read: Read the full paper carefully
- Flash Cards: Generate flashcards for key concepts and findings
- Mind Map: Create a mind map showing how the paper’s arguments connect
- Review: Use the flashcards a day later for active recall
This workflow applies spaced repetition principles without the overhead of manually creating study materials. The time savings compound — over a semester of reading 10-15 papers per week, students report saving 5 to 8 hours on study material creation alone.
Exam Preparation
For exam prep, the combination of Study Guide and Flash Cards is particularly effective:
- Generate a Study Guide for each major reading
- Generate Flash Cards for each reading
- Review flashcards daily, using the study guides as reference when you get a question wrong
- Before the exam, review all Mind Maps for a structural overview of the course material
Professional Certification
Professionals studying for certifications (AWS, PMP, CFA, bar exam) use these presets to process large volumes of preparatory material. The Cheat Sheet preset is especially popular here — it creates exactly the kind of condensed reference sheet you would tape to your monitor during study sessions.
How Professionals Use These Beyond Studying
Learning presets are not just for students. Here is how working professionals use them.
Onboarding to a New Role
Starting a new job means absorbing massive amounts of domain knowledge quickly. Use the Study Guide preset on internal documentation, industry reports, and key articles your manager recommends. Within a week, you have a personal knowledge base structured for quick reference.
Staying Current in Your Field
Subscribe to industry newsletters, but use Flash Cards on the most important articles each week. Over time, you build a growing deck of domain knowledge that you can review whenever you have five spare minutes.
Preparing for Client Meetings
Before meeting a client in an unfamiliar industry, run their recent press coverage through the Cheat Sheet preset. You walk in knowing the key numbers, recent developments, and industry terminology — without spending hours reading.
Training and Workshops
If you lead training sessions, use the Mind Map preset to structure your presentations. It reveals the natural hierarchy of a topic, which translates directly into slide structure.
Getting Started with Learning Presets
Finding Presets in the Marketplace
- Click the 5MinRead icon
- Go to Settings and then Presets
- Browse the Marketplace tab
- Search for “Flash Cards,” “Study Guide,” “Mind Map,” or “Cheat Sheet”
- Click Install — the preset is now available in your preset dropdown
Choosing the Right Preset for the Situation
| Situation | Best Preset |
|---|---|
| Need to memorize specific facts | Flash Cards |
| Need to understand overall structure | Mind Map |
| Need comprehensive study material | Study Guide |
| Need quick reference for a meeting | Cheat Sheet |
| Need to decide if something is worth reading | Standard Summary |
Combining Presets for Maximum Effect
There is nothing stopping you from running multiple presets on the same article. A powerful combination:
- Mind Map first — understand the structure
- Flash Cards second — extract testable knowledge
- Cheat Sheet third — create a quick reference
Each preset gives you a different lens on the same content. Together, they create a comprehensive learning package from a single article.
Tips for Better Results
- Longer articles produce better flashcards. A 500-word blog post might only yield 3-4 useful cards. A 3,000-word deep dive gives you 12-15 high-quality cards.
- Technical content works especially well with the Study Guide preset because it has clear concepts and definitions to extract.
- Use the “Detailed” summary length for learning presets. The extra detail produces more thorough study materials.
- Save your outputs. Copy them into your note-taking app (Notion, Obsidian, Anki) for long-term retention.
The goal is not to replace deep reading. It is to make sure the deep reading you do actually sticks. These presets turn passive consumption into active learning materials — automatically, in seconds, from any article you encounter online.