How to Facilitate Better Using Miro - with Carolina Poll
What if the difference between a workshop that falls flat and one that truly lands isn't the content - but the tool you use to hold it?
In this episode, we explore how Miro can be far more than a digital whiteboard. When used intentionally, it becomes a facilitation tool that carries structure, deepens collaboration, and makes the work visible in ways a slide deck never can. But that power comes with a catch: the more flexible the tool, the more preparation it demands. Because in virtual spaces, you can't improvise your way to a great session - you design your way there. Whether you're new to Miro or have been using it for years, this conversation will shift how you think about what the board is actually for - and who it's really designed for.
Get the free brief summary:
What we explore:
- Why Miro is more than a whiteboard - and how thinking of it as a facilitation tool changes the way you design and run sessions
- How choosing the right Miro approach for your audience (classic board, Engage, or hybrid) can make or break participant experience
- Why preparation is the single most important skill in virtual facilitation - and what that actually looks like in practice
- The features, habits, and design principles that separate a board full of sticky notes from one that genuinely supports learning and collaboration