Great tool for collaboration
What do you like best about the product?
Miro has become an essential part of how I collaborate and plan, especially in cross-functional teams. What I like most is its flexibility—it adapts seamlessly to whatever I need it to be, whether it's a digital whiteboard for ideation, a workshop space for team retrospectives, or a visual roadmap for product planning.
The real-time collaboration is excellent. Being able to co-create with others—dropping in sticky notes, drawing out flows, or building frameworks together—makes remote work feel much more connected. The wide range of templates, integrations (especially with tools like Jira and Slack), and easy navigation mean I don’t waste time setting things up. It just works.
Miro strikes a great balance between structure and creativity. It lets you start messy and bring order later, which is exactly how most innovation starts. That’s what makes it such a powerful thinking and planning tool.
The real-time collaboration is excellent. Being able to co-create with others—dropping in sticky notes, drawing out flows, or building frameworks together—makes remote work feel much more connected. The wide range of templates, integrations (especially with tools like Jira and Slack), and easy navigation mean I don’t waste time setting things up. It just works.
Miro strikes a great balance between structure and creativity. It lets you start messy and bring order later, which is exactly how most innovation starts. That’s what makes it such a powerful thinking and planning tool.
What do you dislike about the product?
It would be helpful if there was an integration with Google docs so you could edit the Miro workflow in Google Docs.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Miro solves the problem of disconnected collaboration, especially in remote or hybrid teams. Before using it, brainstorming, planning, and decision-making often happened in silos or across fragmented tools—sticky notes, spreadsheets, slide decks, and long email threads. Miro brings all of that into one shared, visual workspace.
It enables real-time co-creation, which means teams can ideate, map processes, run retrospectives, or prioritize work together—even if they’re in different time zones. That has significantly reduced miscommunication and helped align everyone faster.
For me personally, Miro has streamlined workshops and stakeholder engagement. I can visually communicate complex ideas, get feedback instantly, and iterate collaboratively without jumping between tools. It also helps me maintain momentum after meetings because everything is captured in one space and can be revisited or built upon.
In short, Miro is solving the chaos of digital collaboration by making it more visual, interactive, and centralized—and that’s making my workflow more efficient and engaging.
It enables real-time co-creation, which means teams can ideate, map processes, run retrospectives, or prioritize work together—even if they’re in different time zones. That has significantly reduced miscommunication and helped align everyone faster.
For me personally, Miro has streamlined workshops and stakeholder engagement. I can visually communicate complex ideas, get feedback instantly, and iterate collaboratively without jumping between tools. It also helps me maintain momentum after meetings because everything is captured in one space and can be revisited or built upon.
In short, Miro is solving the chaos of digital collaboration by making it more visual, interactive, and centralized—and that’s making my workflow more efficient and engaging.