Slot 35
What You’ll Need
The map is where you will do most of your setup work — finding your property, drawing your tract boundaries, and looking up information on specific wells. It is also one of the…
Turn the work into a decision-ready report
Reports are most useful when they explain both the outcome and the assumptions behind it. Add a short executive note, include the supporting property details, and make sure the report title is easy to recognize later.
Share the report with the smallest group that can move the work forward. If someone only needs to review the final output, send the report link instead of adding them to the full workspace.
Good sharing habits
Include a note about what needs review.
Keep internal edits separate from client-facing comments.
Before you begin
The county where your minerals are located. If you are looking for a specific well, having its API14 number is helpful but not required.
The map is where you will do most of your setup work — finding your property, drawing your tract boundaries, and looking up information on specific wells. It is also one of the most powerful views in the platform once you know how to use it.
Getting Oriented Open the map from the left-hand sidebar. Use the search bar at the top to navigate to your area. You can search by state, by county, or by an API14 number — the 14-digit identifier unique to every oil and gas well in the country. Searching by county is the easiest starting point for most mineral owners.
Map Layers The map has several data layers you can toggle on and off. Each one shows something different.
Market Value This layer turns the map into a heat map, showing areas with higher value per net royalty acre in warmer colors. It gives you a quick visual sense of how your area compares to the broader market before you dig into your specific property.
Landgrid The Landgrid layer overlays county parcel boundaries — the legal survey lines that define land ownership. With this layer on, you can often find your property’s boundary, click on it, and use it as a starting point when creating your tract. Not every property aligns perfectly with the parcel grid, especially with inherited minerals or fractional interests, but it is the best starting point for most mineral owners.
Wells The Wells layer shows every oil and gas well on the map. Click on any well to see its basic information: API14, operator, and well status. This layer is useful for understanding the activity in your area — how many active wells there are, where permits are being filed, and how your property sits relative to existing production.
Note: the wells shown here come from public data sources and reflect all wells on the map — not your specific ownership interest yet. That connection happens in Module 2 when you set up your tracts.
Tracts The Tracts layer shows the properties you have already added to your portfolio. If you are just getting started, this layer will be empty until you create your first tract in Module 2.
Recommended Starting Workflow When finding a property, start with the Landgrid layer on to see parcel boundaries, then add the Wells layer to see what is producing nearby. That combination tells you a lot about a property before you click on anything.
Once you have found your area and are ready to create a tract, use the draw tool to trace your boundary or click the parcel directly. Module 2 covers that process step by step.
Before you begin
The county where your minerals are located. If you are looking for a specific well, having its API14 number is helpful but not required.
The map is where you will do most of your setup work — finding your property, drawing your tract boundaries, and looking up information on specific wells. It is also one of the most powerful views in the platform once you know how to use it.
Getting Oriented
Open the map from the left-hand sidebar. Use the search bar at the top to navigate to your area. You can search by state, by county, or by an API14 number — the 14-digit identifier unique to every oil and gas well in the country. Searching by county is the easiest starting point for most mineral owners.
Map Layers
The map has several data layers you can toggle on and off. Each one shows something different.
Market Value
This layer turns the map into a heat map, showing areas with higher value per net royalty acre in warmer colors. It gives you a quick visual sense of how your area compares to the broader market before you dig into your specific property.
Landgrid
The Landgrid layer overlays county parcel boundaries — the legal survey lines that define land ownership. With this layer on, you can often find your property’s boundary, click on it, and use it as a starting point when creating your tract. Not every property aligns perfectly with the parcel grid, especially with inherited minerals or fractional interests, but it is the best starting point for most mineral owners.
Wells
The Wells layer shows every oil and gas well on the map. Click on any well to see its basic information: API14, operator, and well status. This layer is useful for understanding the activity in your area — how many active wells there are, where permits are being filed, and how your property sits relative to existing production.
Note: the wells shown here come from public data sources and reflect all wells on the map — not your specific ownership interest yet. That connection happens in Module 2 when you set up your tracts.
Tracts
The Tracts layer shows the properties you have already added to your portfolio. If you are just getting started, this layer will be empty until you create your first tract in Module 2.
Recommended Starting Workflow
When finding a property, start with the Landgrid layer on to see parcel boundaries, then add the Wells layer to see what is producing nearby. That combination tells you a lot about a property before you click on anything.
Once you have found your area and are ready to create a tract, use the draw tool to trace your boundary or click the parcel directly. Module 2 covers that process step by step.
