Miro
MiroExternal reviews
10,008 reviews
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Helpful Tool for Wide Variety of Needs
What do you like best about the product?
I like how useful it is for a wide variety of tasks - it is really useful to our production.
What do you dislike about the product?
There are few downsides - I would say when you get started with the platform it can be a little hard to understand how best to utilize it for your specific needs. But once you get the hang of it, it really is great.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
It helps my team get all their ideas, submissions and artwork into one place/
Great for Evolving Tools and JIRA Integration, Minor UI Frustrations
What do you like best about the product?
I like that it's constantly evolving and new tools are added so that it can be used in multiple ways. For example, the link with JIRA helps me to manage design content board more easily and flesh out the action items.
What do you dislike about the product?
At times, the user interface can be frustrating, but overall it remains quite minimal. I have also noticed that the UI has improved over time.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Miro enables us to create design documents where we can easily give feedback and incorporate graphics or other visual elements. Since our design documents are always evolving, Miro makes it simple to share updates with stakeholders.
We use MIRO for everything.
What do you like best about the product?
Graphical mapping and collaboration. Sketching out ideas and concepts quickly. Verr easy interface.
What do you dislike about the product?
Exporting is clunky. Difficult to life from MIRO into documents seamlessly.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Collaborative mind mapping internally and with our customers. Having everything in one place, its invaluable.
Miro: Unmatched Visual Flexibility, but Reliability and Offline Limitations Hold It Back
What do you like best about the product?
The main driver for us is the visual freedom Miro offers, it’s like having an infinite whiteboard in a virtual space. We can create, edit, search, and rearrange post-its quickly, without the constraints of physical space. In fact, our Miro boards are often far bigger and more detailed than anything we could ever fit on an office wall.
The ready-made templates help us hit the ground running, they’re not always a perfect fit, but they’re easy to adapt. We use Miro for everything from business and product strategy, to UX design, slide packs, pitch decks, and client updates. We embed images, spreadsheets, links — whatever we need.
In short, Miro is almost as flexible as our imagination.
The ready-made templates help us hit the ground running, they’re not always a perfect fit, but they’re easy to adapt. We use Miro for everything from business and product strategy, to UX design, slide packs, pitch decks, and client updates. We embed images, spreadsheets, links — whatever we need.
In short, Miro is almost as flexible as our imagination.
What do you dislike about the product?
While Miro is a brilliant tool for collaboration and creativity, there are a few limitations we’ve come to know well.
The biggest challenge is reliability. Around peak hours — particularly when North America starts its working day — we sometimes experience dropouts or freezing, which can be disruptive, especially when we rely on Miro as our single source of truth. Presenting a strategy board or slide deck becomes stressful when there’s no robust offline mode or export option that replicates the interactivity of the live board.
Another issue is connectivity dependency. You really need a strong, stable internet connection — something that’s not always guaranteed when you’re out of the office. Large boards can struggle to load on mobile, making it hard to capture ideas that come to you on the move.
We’ve also experienced the occasional corrupted board, though thankfully we’ve built a habit of exporting regular backups. To manage complexity, we now break our content across multiple smaller boards — which helps with performance, but can undermine the benefit of having everything in one visual space.
Lastly, we’d love to see a dedicated UX design output, where Miro helps convert early boards into something more polished for wireframing, prototyping, or developer handoff — something that bridges the gap between whiteboarding and design tools.
The biggest challenge is reliability. Around peak hours — particularly when North America starts its working day — we sometimes experience dropouts or freezing, which can be disruptive, especially when we rely on Miro as our single source of truth. Presenting a strategy board or slide deck becomes stressful when there’s no robust offline mode or export option that replicates the interactivity of the live board.
Another issue is connectivity dependency. You really need a strong, stable internet connection — something that’s not always guaranteed when you’re out of the office. Large boards can struggle to load on mobile, making it hard to capture ideas that come to you on the move.
We’ve also experienced the occasional corrupted board, though thankfully we’ve built a habit of exporting regular backups. To manage complexity, we now break our content across multiple smaller boards — which helps with performance, but can undermine the benefit of having everything in one visual space.
Lastly, we’d love to see a dedicated UX design output, where Miro helps convert early boards into something more polished for wireframing, prototyping, or developer handoff — something that bridges the gap between whiteboarding and design tools.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Single source of truth. We started with a business plan for a Bootstrapped company and have used Miro to eventually build out UX designs for potential product.
Miro is magic for facilitating hybrid collaboration, once you can log-in that is
What do you like best about the product?
Miro is a great tool for facilitation and collaboration in the era of hybrid work. Where teams are distributed and interactive sessions are challenging to host over a call, I use Miro for consistently great results. We have thoughtful and effective timeboxes instead of awkward silences and input from a small noisy minority within the team
What do you dislike about the product?
Miro does take a little getting use to, and the sizing of the boards and familiarity with zooming in and out when team members are new can be a challenge. Getting access as a guest is also a bit of a learning curve. Once you are in however, it is a great way to collaborate
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
I use miro for
- beautiful illustrations
- easy to use templates for meetings
- running input based sessions like retros, planning, solutioning, pre/post mortems, and social connections
- beautiful illustrations
- easy to use templates for meetings
- running input based sessions like retros, planning, solutioning, pre/post mortems, and social connections
Great for Collaboration, but Wireframing Tools Need Improvement
What do you like best about the product?
I like that Miro makes it easy for teams and stakeholders to collaborate visually. As a product manager, we're able to use Miro to capture product requirements, create diagrams/user flows and wireframes to help drive conversations.
What do you dislike about the product?
Limited capabilities for wireframing and prototyping
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Team and Client / Stakeholder Collaboration and Alignment
Great for Collaboration and Idea Organization, but Figma Integration Needs Work
What do you like best about the product?
I really enjoy working collaboratively and using it as a repository to collect and organize my ideas.
What do you dislike about the product?
Some integrations leave room for improvement. I encountered a few problems specifically with the Figma integration.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Miro has been instrumental for me and my team as we begin developing the MVP for our payfac product. It’s making the initial stages of our project much smoother.
Great Program for Collaboration
What do you like best about the product?
Easy collaboration and diagramming for team members both in and out of the office.
What do you dislike about the product?
It can be laggy, especially after the West Coast gets started for the day.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Using a pin-up space both in house and with remote consultants and team members
Flexible and Easy to Use
What do you like best about the product?
I really like Miro’s flexible layout — it makes it easy to arrange notes, ideas, and plans all in one place. Great for organising projects and keeping everything visible at a glance.
What do you dislike about the product?
I currently have no negative comments to make at this time
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Its allowing me to centralise and of collate notes and information in a single workspace whilst segregating different work tasks
Intuitive Design, Yet Setup Challenges Remain
What do you like best about the product?
I appreciate Miro for its flexibility and visually appealing, intuitive design. The integration with Jira is beneficial for connection to existing kanbans, especially of IT-development. Besides, it helps in structuring information and facilitating collaboration, especially during brainstorming sessions. It effectively supports hosting meetings, gathering group information, and designing visual products like information charts.
What do you dislike about the product?
I find the setup experience somewhat difficult, particularly with the transition between the cursor and hand tool, as well as managing the side panel where tools and layers are present. Granting access to the board and organizing accounts for others also poses challenges. Additionally, the functionality for backing up boards, copying boards, and undoing actions feels inconsistent. Finding solutions to certain problems often requires searching on forums.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Miro helps me visualize and design products, host and gather information from meetings efficiently without revalidation, and make collaboration visual, enhancing teamwork.
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