Miro allows teams to work together in a remote setting. Creating mood boards and logical systems architecture has been very helpful.
Updated May 16, 2022
Miro allows teams to work together in a remote setting. Creating mood boards and logical systems architecture has been very helpful.

Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Overall Satisfaction with Miro
We use it for architecture diagrams and general design iterations before implementation. This includes engineering, UX workflows, and initial brainstorming sessions.
Pros
- Multiple users collaboratively moving things.
- Useful templates to preload the board.
- Near infinite scaling of items on board.
Cons
- Sharing access is a bit weird. It goes into another window that sometimes doesn't load based on conflicting certificates or authentication mechanisms.
- Colors are limited for stickies but not for rectangles.
- Versioning of boards could be helpful. We currently just copy-paste the entire frame over and over (a little silly).
- Sharable documentation.
- Better roadmap planning.
- Collaborative brainstorming.
It lets us manage priorities from many stakeholders through remote collaboration. I especially like how easy it is for a new user to be able to jump in. I'd suggest maybe a view-only mode for unregistered folks.
Do you think Miro delivers good value for the price?
Not sure
Are you happy with Miro's feature set?
Yes
Did Miro live up to sales and marketing promises?
Yes
Did implementation of Miro go as expected?
Yes
Would you buy Miro again?
Yes
I like Miro's ease of use and how it feels to use. The soft icons and colorful nature of it really help over a longer time period when compared to other black and white tools.
Comments
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