Miro
MiroExternal reviews
10,008 reviews
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External reviews are not included in the AWS star rating for the product.
Enables great remote collaboration and planning
What do you like best about the product?
The responsiveness of Miro is great and the ability to see other people's pointers and activity on a board is useful. It's really easy to open Miro and just start putting a picture together that can be shared in multiple ways, and be collaborated on.
What do you dislike about the product?
Finding the feature that shows a list of all frames is not intuitive, every time I want to use this feature I click around for over 5 minutes trying to find it!
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Collaboration while working with multiple teams remotely is challenging and Miro has solved that problem well. People can collaborate in Miro without a presenter needing to share their screen making it an effective and interactive tool to use and keeps sessions interesting and fun.
Miro is the best work place organizing tool
What do you like best about the product?
I am an intern working in a large architecture firm and Miro makes all of our project organization simple and easy. The whiteboard style is what I use most often and has been a great way for my team and I to collaborate and discuss ideas while keeping a strong timeline of changes and comments made on the different phases of the client projects. Im not sure what other program could compare, but I do know that Miro does a excellent job in checking off every need I, and my team, have!
What do you dislike about the product?
I have two suggestions.
1. I wish there were more option for line work, specifically I wish there was an easier way to make a poly line. I do not like how I have to use multiple lines to create an outline for an irregular shape. Its tedious and could be simplified to the a poly line tool similar to the one in Rhino 8.
2. When adding an arrow to connect sticky notes, i wish the arrowhead wouldn't automatically connect to one of the four points that are provided. Sometimes I want an arrow to connect to a bullet point or a photo that I have added to within the stickey note and it is EXTREMELY hard to do this when the head of the arrow keeps wanting to connect to one fo the four center edge points. THIS IS AN EASY FIX, so I would love if you could fix it.
1. I wish there were more option for line work, specifically I wish there was an easier way to make a poly line. I do not like how I have to use multiple lines to create an outline for an irregular shape. Its tedious and could be simplified to the a poly line tool similar to the one in Rhino 8.
2. When adding an arrow to connect sticky notes, i wish the arrowhead wouldn't automatically connect to one of the four points that are provided. Sometimes I want an arrow to connect to a bullet point or a photo that I have added to within the stickey note and it is EXTREMELY hard to do this when the head of the arrow keeps wanting to connect to one fo the four center edge points. THIS IS AN EASY FIX, so I would love if you could fix it.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
It helps my team have a space to formulate and collaborate through our ideas.
Easy to use and fun to collaborate with colleagues in a real time.
What do you like best about the product?
The most liked feature is real-time collab with your work colleagues and you have tons of preset design templates that you can use to start your work. for example if you are planning marketing calendar, you can just something from template. Personally Miro is daily part of my work life, I use it regularly to design projects and brainstorm ideas for marketing campaign.
What do you dislike about the product?
As a small business, cost is on the higher side per user. one other thing that they cam improve is video integration. they do not allow direct video drag and drop, you have to upload every video to Youtube to preview in Miro.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
real time collaboration, ease of use for beginners without tool knowledge. all in one for visual presentation.
A perfect addition to my work
What do you like best about the product?
It's the best tool on the market to help you with collaboration, brainstorming and knowledge sharing. Miro is easy to learn, the quick training guide on the website is also very easy to follow.
What do you dislike about the product?
I'm missing a option to quickly gather statistics/KPI's from finished and ongoing work
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
In a hybrid world it makes the work a lot easier in collaborating, there is no treshhold and people can connect in a very efficient and quick way.
Easy to use collaborative tool
What do you like best about the product?
What I love most about Miro is its ability to organize all my retrospective templates within frames. This makes it easy to navigate and reference past retrospective items and their action statuses whenever needed; simply clicking on the desired frame provides immediate access.
What do you dislike about the product?
I appreciate the frequent addition of new templates, but would appreciate even more retrospective templates. Since joining my team in 2021, I've used nearly all the existing retrospective templates for my bi-weekly sprint retrospectives.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Miro significantly eases my agile project planning, including PI planning, sprint planning, backlog refinement, and sprint retrospectives. Its PI planning board templates effectively address the challenge of mapping inter-team dependencies. Furthermore, Miro helps with facilitating user story mapping and product journey mapping through its diverse template selection.
Miro is transforming my view of the company
What do you like best about the product?
It is very simple to use and has various features.
What do you dislike about the product?
I don't like that in the free version they only allow 3 boards, but I understand that it's a freemium strategy.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Miro gives me an incredible way to visualize the processes I have mapped with my company, this brings me a clarity that allows me to plan better and communicate more clearly to the team.
Retrospectives has become easier and more collaborative
What do you like best about the product?
we have been using Miro at an organization level and it is helping us to create the architectural diagrams, process flows, business flows. We have started using Miro board for our project retrospectives too that are happening quite frequently, it is easy to use and integrate within our applications too.
What do you dislike about the product?
Navigations could be better, sometimes its confusing to navigate to the next pages and when we need move the objects to the different page or boards
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
project Management, product management
Honest Review
What do you like best about the product?
Clear and minimalist and I like to use that
What do you dislike about the product?
too many ads and free plan seats are too low
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Very east to collegue and save efficient times
Miro Turns Remote Brainstorms into a Shared “Digital War-Room”
What do you like best about the product?
• Real-time collaboration feels instant—even with 20+ people sketching, voting, and dropping sticky notes at once.
• An enormous template library (OKRs, Kanban, mind maps, customer journey maps) lets you kick off new workshops in seconds instead of starting from a blank canvas.
• The infinite canvas means you never “run out of whiteboard,” and the mini-map keeps navigation sane.
• Handy facilitation tools—timer, bulk sticky clustering, voting, and presentation mode—help keep workshops structured without switching apps.
• Deep integrations with Jira, Confluence, Figma, and Google Workspace pull context in and push outcomes back to the right places.
• Easy guest access makes it painless to include clients or cross-functional partners who don’t have a paid seat.
• An enormous template library (OKRs, Kanban, mind maps, customer journey maps) lets you kick off new workshops in seconds instead of starting from a blank canvas.
• The infinite canvas means you never “run out of whiteboard,” and the mini-map keeps navigation sane.
• Handy facilitation tools—timer, bulk sticky clustering, voting, and presentation mode—help keep workshops structured without switching apps.
• Deep integrations with Jira, Confluence, Figma, and Google Workspace pull context in and push outcomes back to the right places.
• Easy guest access makes it painless to include clients or cross-functional partners who don’t have a paid seat.
What do you dislike about the product?
• Large boards can become sluggish; once you cross a few thousand objects, load times and zooming tend to stutter.
• User-management costs add up quickly—occasional contributors often need a full seat, which feels pricey for light use.
• Advanced features (e.g., rolling up Jira issues or using diagramming shortcuts) have a moderate learning curve that can intimidate first-timers.
• Offline mode is limited; a flaky connection can stall a workshop.
• Comment notifications sometimes flood your inbox if you’re part of multiple active boards.
• User-management costs add up quickly—occasional contributors often need a full seat, which feels pricey for light use.
• Advanced features (e.g., rolling up Jira issues or using diagramming shortcuts) have a moderate learning curve that can intimidate first-timers.
• Offline mode is limited; a flaky connection can stall a workshop.
• Comment notifications sometimes flood your inbox if you’re part of multiple active boards.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Distributed-team drift → Shared real-time canvas
• With teammates across 5 time zones, traditional whiteboards and slide decks created version-control chaos.
• Miro’s infinite canvas lets everyone contribute simultaneously or asynchronously, so ideas don’t get lost between meetings.
Context switching between tools → One collaborative hub
• We used to juggle Figma for wireframes, PowerPoint for roadmaps, and Jira for task breakdowns.
• Embedding those artifacts directly onto a Miro board keeps conversations, visuals, and action items in one place, reducing meeting prep time by ~30%.
Facilitation overhead → Built-in workshop utilities
• Timers, voting, and auto-clustering eliminate the need for separate polling or sticky-note apps, letting facilitators focus on content instead of logistics.
Knowledge silos → Living documentation
• Boards persist long after a workshop, so new joiners can trace the “why” behind decisions without digging through email threads.
• Linking to Confluence or Google Docs turns the board into a navigable map of related artifacts.
Slow decision cycles → Visual alignment at high speed
• Real-time sketching of user flows or architectures helps us spot gaps instantly, cutting the average design-review cycle from a week to a day.
Engagement drop in virtual meetings → Interactive canvases
• The act of moving notes, drawing arrows, and voting keeps participants active, raising post-meeting survey scores for “engagement” from 6/10 to 9/10.
• With teammates across 5 time zones, traditional whiteboards and slide decks created version-control chaos.
• Miro’s infinite canvas lets everyone contribute simultaneously or asynchronously, so ideas don’t get lost between meetings.
Context switching between tools → One collaborative hub
• We used to juggle Figma for wireframes, PowerPoint for roadmaps, and Jira for task breakdowns.
• Embedding those artifacts directly onto a Miro board keeps conversations, visuals, and action items in one place, reducing meeting prep time by ~30%.
Facilitation overhead → Built-in workshop utilities
• Timers, voting, and auto-clustering eliminate the need for separate polling or sticky-note apps, letting facilitators focus on content instead of logistics.
Knowledge silos → Living documentation
• Boards persist long after a workshop, so new joiners can trace the “why” behind decisions without digging through email threads.
• Linking to Confluence or Google Docs turns the board into a navigable map of related artifacts.
Slow decision cycles → Visual alignment at high speed
• Real-time sketching of user flows or architectures helps us spot gaps instantly, cutting the average design-review cycle from a week to a day.
Engagement drop in virtual meetings → Interactive canvases
• The act of moving notes, drawing arrows, and voting keeps participants active, raising post-meeting survey scores for “engagement” from 6/10 to 9/10.
Simple Layout
What do you like best about the product?
Uncomplicated tools make it easy to allocate tasks.
What do you dislike about the product?
Color scheme is somewhat over saturated.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Making complex solutions seem simpler.
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