Miro, the online collaboration software provider, recently introduced Innovation Workspace, which it touts as the most significant product update in the company’s history. This AI-powered platform is designed to optimize the product design and innovation process; more than that, it signals a big shift in Miro’s strategic direction and its position within the broader collaborative workspace market.

According to the company, Miro’s aim with Innovation Workspace is to address the “massive disconnect between how organizations want to work and how they’re actually working” by providing a centralized, intelligent canvas for the entire innovation lifecycle. This is meant to reduce reliance on multiple tools and overcome challenges such as information silos and communication barriers. All features that were announced as part of the launch are currently in private or public beta and will become GA on a rolling basis before the end of Q4.

Functional And Competitive Implications For Miro

In my assessment, this launch is significant in two big ways. First, on a functional level, Innovation Workspace directly tackles common organizational challenges that impede innovation, such as fragmented workflows and communication breakdowns. As a former CMO in a product-led company, I’ve worked closely with product and development teams, and I know these obstacles can significantly hinder productivity and delay time to market. By providing a centralized platform with AI-powered tools for prototyping, feedback collection and project management, Miro aims to foster a more streamlined and efficient innovation environment. Specifically, Miro is incorporating AI features such as Sidekick, which offers contextual suggestions and automates tasks, and Catch-up, which uses AI to summarize important changes and decisions made on the board to help everyone stay informed.

AI features such as these will likely be a critical factor in driving adoption. These features are designed to be easily integrated into the user workflow, minimizing the learning curve and maximizing efficiency. Miro emphasizes making collaboration “more interactive, engaging and inclusive” through features such as interactive stickers, new intelligent widgets and integrated video calls.

Second, on the competitive front, this launch could reposition Miro within its market. Miro has a strong reputation for visual collaboration and innovative features. However, with Innovation Workspace, Miro could be evolving from a whiteboard provider into a comprehensive solution for managing the whole innovation lifecycle. This shift could be a crucial differentiator to distinguish Miro from competitors such as Mural, Lucidspark and Figma’s FigJam, which concentrate primarily on visual collaboration tools. While the competitors just mentioned excel at visual brainstorming and collaboration, they seem to lack the depth of project management and AI-driven features that Miro is now offering. For example, Mural’s AI features primarily focus on mind-map generation and clustering, while FigJam’s AI is limited to design suggestions. Conversely, Miro leverages AI across a broader range of activities, from project planning and task management to automated feedback analysis.

By bridging the gap between visual collaboration and structured project management, Miro has put itself in a unique position in the market with Innovation Workspace. Its strength lies in its highly visual and flexible platform, which helps users with real-time brainstorming, ideation and collaborative design. Its extensive template library also supports this by offering pre-built structures for various innovation methodologies, including design thinking, agile development and customer journey mapping. This “canvas-first” approach, along with integrations for popular development tools such as Azure DevOps, GitHub and Trello, make Miro a valuable asset for development teams.

While Miro excels at visual planning and collaborative design thinking, it’s not a replacement for dedicated project management tools with granular task management features such as Jira or Trello. Instead, Miro can be a useful complement to these tools, allowing teams to visually collaborate and generate ideas that inform the tasks managed in more structured platforms. This combination could boost engagement and clarity during the early stages of development, leading to a greater sense of purpose and understanding as teams execute their tasks.

If organizations require that granular task level detail within Miro, many of these leading project management tools can be integrated directly into the canvas or through third-party integrations such as Zapier. Still, addressing Miro’s project management limitations through add-ons can lead to a complex ecosystem. Organizations could need to integrate multiple vendors’ solutions and manage an expanding tech stack. This need to navigate data synchronization challenges across platforms and balance the cumulative costs of these additional tools could potentially offset the initial appeal of Miro’s visual collaboration capabilities.

Miro’s Potential Benefits And Success Factors

According to Miro, the objective of the new functionality is to deliver an enterprise-grade platform for teams involved in developing and launching new products and services. The potential benefits for businesses are substantial: increased efficiency, enhanced collaboration and accelerated time-to-market. For example, by centralizing communication and reducing the friction of task management, Innovation Workspace could reduce meeting times and streamline workflows, leading to faster product development cycles. Early user feedback suggests that the platform has helped teams shorten project timelines by 15% and increase cross-functional collaboration by 20%.

Other parts of Miro’s offering play key roles, too. The Miro Developer Platform provides a robust set of APIs and SDKs that allow developers to extend Miro’s functionality, build custom integrations and embed Miro boards into other applications. This open-platform approach and support for more than 160 integrations and 6,000 private apps should enable businesses to tailor Innovation Workspace to their specific needs by connecting Miro with their existing technology stacks.

As an example of its open-platform approach, just this month, Miro announced the integration of Adobe Express into its platform. With a public beta release slated for late November 2024, this integration will allow users to access various Adobe design tools without leaving the Miro environment. The goal is to streamline the creative process by enabling image creation, graphics editing and the use of templates within the collaborative workspace, eliminating the need to switch between applications. This initiative reflects Miro’s ongoing effort to broaden its platform’s functionality. It gives users the benefit of remaining focused on the task at hand while using tools that are likely familiar to them.

To gain further insight into Innovation Workspace, I solicited hands-on feedback from my colleague Jason Andersen, vice president and principal analyst for application platforms at Moor Insights & Strategy. Here’s what he had to report.

A Hands-On Test Drive Of Miro

Miro was nice enough to give us access to its platform so we could try things out. The experience was quite good. The interface was understandable to anyone with a background in drawing applications, and access to the AI features was prominent. Two things really stood out during our time on the platform.

First, the AI features are a great launching point for achieving higher-quality outputs in less time. For example, I built a quick mind map for a basic application, shown in the first picture below. Frankly, it was only an okay first draft; it would need many more iterations to make it usable by a team of product managers and architects. But by taking my basic thoughts and putting them into the AI generator, I produced a much better revised draft, which is shown in the second picture below. Developing the prompt for the AI Generator took less than a quarter of the time compared to making the map myself, and it was something I could easily modify and hand off to a product team.

Second, the templates and integrations are great. The platform comes with several preloaded templates to structure deliverables, as well as integrations with toolsets from Jira, Azure and AWS. All of this makes documenting contextual processes, flows and infrastructure very straightforward. I would say that while this is a great way to augment common work tools, Miro could help users by taking the concept further. I would like to see user-defined flows to walk teams through a whole innovation/ideation process that can then load the relevant content into the integration points where work is done and measured.

Some of this seems to be possible based on quick testing. For example, I was especially pleased when I could generate an entity relationship diagram from the mind map above. But I am thinking about a more agent-driven approach like we are starting to see on other platforms such as Salesforce and ServiceNow. It could be a great way to extend what Miro has already done very well.

Drawing Conclusions

Andersen’s feedback indicates that Innovation Workspace delivers on its promise of enhanced efficiency and collaboration through AI and integrations. However, it also highlights the potential for Miro to further evolve the platform by deepening its workflow automation and creating a more integrated experience that connects the entire innovation lifecycle.

It will be particularly interesting to observe how Miro leverages its canvas-first approach and extensive integration capabilities to cater to the increasingly sophisticated demands of enterprise clients. Miro’s commitment to security and compliance, evident in its advanced security features and Enterprise Guard add-on, will likely be another key factor in its adoption. The market response to Innovation Workspace may hinge on Miro’s ability to capitalize on its strengths in AI, user-centric design and platform extensibility. If it can effectively do this, Miro is positioned to be a strong contender in shaping how product teams approach the innovation lifecycle, from ideation to execution. As the lines between different categories of work software continue to blur, Miro appears well-prepared to navigate this evolving landscape.

Share.
Exit mobile version