Echoing here how useful this would be on my team.
We tend to break out a lot of our items frame-by-frame but when transitioning from board to Confluence document, it’d be nice to not have to worry about people getting lost when they examine things.
Take for example a Miro board of three floors of a building with a seating chart.
All on one board makes sense for organization and editing but viewing we would want to present and view each floor individually.
And the use cases for complex business flows and work instructions is even greater.
Hi @kay.huang @DonateToAACR
Thanks so much for taking the time to submit this idea. Our team has reviewed this and it’s open for votes and comments.
For those coming across this idea, if you feel this would be helpful for you or your business, please be sure to vote for it and leave a comment about your use case to help our team scope this request!
Thank you again for helping make Miro better!
Agreed, I often create flows etc in Miro that I want to embed in Confluence pages for team summaries etc - right now even if it’s anchored to the relevant frame, the surrounding content is distracting, it doesn’t give enough focus to the content I’m embedding.
It’s making me question if I need to use another tool for this.
I am familiar with Gliffy as a diagraming tool in Confluence and was very happy with the solution. Miro has amazing capabilities for diagramming, but the inability to embed a frame as a read-only view for all users is definitely a challenge.
As a work-around, I am saving the frame as an image and embedding that into my Confluence page with a link to the Miro board. This is not the best solution because the image is now the out-of-date middle man to the content and must be updated manually.
I hope Miro will update this soon and understand the value of authors being able to publish Miro content in other applications in the format and style that works best for them.