Great tool for team collaboration
March 28, 2024

Great tool for team collaboration

Anonymous | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User

Overall Satisfaction with Miro

We use Miro mainly for group collaboration, occasionally on solo work as well. Our main use cases are as a brainstorming platform for workshops (especially with remote members) and creating timelines and overviews of projects, which sometimes includes assigning and tracking tasks. We also use Miro as a team sharing platform where everyone adds information about what they work on in a presentation mode that is then presented during team meetings.
  • Multiple people working on the same canvas
  • Flowcharts
  • Keeping large amounts of information well in one place
  • Integration with Jira, ClickUp, Monday or other task tracking software
  • Customization of design elements, e.g. changing the roundness of rounded squares
  • Presentation quality has increased
We started using Miro during the pandemic lockdowns and kept it afterwards. It was a requirement we didn't know we had until some teams tested it and were amazed. Since then, in most discussions when we kick off a new project or start brainstorming, the first step is opening a Miro board and using one of our templates to get started. It's become one of our go-to tools across the organisation.

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?

I wasn't involved with the selection/purchase process

Did implementation of Miro go as expected?

I wasn't involved with the implementation phase

Would you buy Miro again?

Yes

Miro is fantastic when it comes to multiple people dropping information in one space and sorting it, organising it, and visualising it in a better way. It also works great to then transform that into something that can be presented.

While it can be great to put things together, it's not as good to keep that as a living document. Often projects reach a complexity where changes to a board mean a lot of manual work to move things around and back into place that it becomes cumbersome.