I like Miro
April 06, 2024

I like Miro

Dan Ramsden | TrustRadius Reviewer
Score 10 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User

Overall Satisfaction with Miro

Miro helps me to explore and communicate ideas spatially. This introduces another set of thinking styles to independent and collaborative work. The fact that you can collaborate in a shared space is useful in hybrid working contexts. The use of tagging and other tools to support automation makes Miro more efficient than some "real world" processes and ways of working. And the introduction to templates for common tasks and processes can get you started quickly and provide inspiration for a tool/process to jump-start your thinking. The ability to use Miro as both a thinking space and a tool for communication through linear and non-linear presentation makes it the perfect tool for multidisciplinary collaboration.
  • Visual thinking
  • Automated affinity sorting through tagging
  • Realtime collaboration
  • Support for more file formats
  • Video support
  • simpler user permissions
  • supported hybrid working and distributed teams
  • quicker synthesis of workshop outputs
  • templates save time in planning and preparation
It's provided a shared tool across disciplines that provides "space to think"... the written record allows us to revisit workshop outputs throughout a project - checking in on our original intent and ideas and seeing how they've evolved.
Miro seemed more powerful and provided more functionality at the time of testing.
The learning curve for Miro seemed shallower when compared to fig jam.

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

Multidisciplinary collaboration and workshops
Individual working and exploring concepts "spatially"
replicating real-world workshops in hybrid contexts