Miro Review 2025.
June 03, 2025
Miro Review 2025.

Score 9 out of 10
Vetted Review
Verified User
Overall Satisfaction with Miro
I use Miro for a ton of different use cases. We use it for creative brainstorm ideation when we're developing concepts, campaigns, solutions. I used it independently when I'm trying to onboard on a new topic or process as a virtual desk to be able to organize, annotate and/or aggregate more information in one place. We also use Miro internally to work together on a project when people want to build in one board whether it's for UX, strategy ideation, or audience research/design. Sometimes we'll use Miro for client workshops when we need to seamlessly engage virtually (or in person) with clients and teams in one workshop.
Pros
- Seamless UX, I like the functionality and design of the site. It's clean and easy to navigate for someone new to the platform.
- Template variety: there are numerous options for templates tailored to different use cases, providing a great starting point for someone like me who is open to new ways and layouts for presenting or distilling information.
- Compatibility: I really appreciate how you can upload links, presentations, PPTs, share boards quickly, pictures, etc. so you can assess multiple formats of resources all in one space.
Cons
- If there were a component that allowed AI to distill information or provide recommendations based on a set of information and the board's goals, that would be extremely helpful. (Maybe this is available, but I haven't seen it advertised or featured in the site).
- The UX is seamless once you're in the board... but I do get confused in the enterprise workspace, and the way teams and clients are set up confuses me. I get nervous I'm making a board in the wrong space.
- Nothing else immediately comes to mind, but having AI be embedded within the board or the ability to use it to assist would be excellent.
- I don't have tangible ROI, but I can say we've been able to visualize customer journeys and share them with clients in presentations that visually are so clean and great (that would've taken hours/days more to build in Powerpoint alone or Photoshop separately).
- Reducing Software: Unsure if this is the correct term, but is consolidating/aggregating more accurate? You can put multiple files/sources into one space, which makes it so easy to direct team members and clients within the context of copious amounts of information.
Being able to visualize consumer experience journeys and have templates that guide are teams with the right inputs to look for has been super helpful. Also client workshop or brainstorm session templates have been extremely helpful in choosing the right format for what we need with our clients depending on our workshop objectives and goals.
It hasn't necessarily replaced other platforms for me; on the contrary, it's made it seamless and easy to aggregate information and inspiration from multiple platforms into one view for my team to react to, work with, and build upon. I view it as a central resource, rather than decreasing my usage on other platforms.
Those are great for deck building, but don't compare to Miro when it comes to team collaboration and longer-form, or longer-timeline projects. Those are great for quick-turn tasks, whereas Miro is ideal for teams diving into meatier projects that require discovery work and heavy collaboration with broader and more diverse teammates, roles, and viewpoints.
Do you think Miro delivers good value for the price?
Yes
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

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