Why make Miro templates?
My prime reason for creating these templates is because I needed them. Given that I use Miro, and there are no suitable templates and I often find myself copy/pasting the same structure, then I find it easier to create a template and import it when I need it. And the added bonus is that someone else might find the templates useful. It is also fairly easy to publish a template. Put all that together and you get some templates I have created so far..
I have been using the LeanCanvas more or less since Ash Maurya first published about it (c.2010). It is a great template and I spent a lot of my time helping people fill one in. Yes, there are other Miro templates but none of them resembled the original look of the canvas and I am just so used to seeing it like this that I even had replicated it in Excel and Google Sheets in the past. Either way, if you know what Lean Canvas is feel free to use the template. If you don't perhaps you need to learn about it? Follow this link to the Lean Canvas Miro template.
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The Evaporating Cloud tool intends to ‘vaporize’ difficult problems by resolving an underlying conflict. Eli Goldratt, who invented the tool, is said to have been inspired by Richard Bach and his 1977 book Illusions, in which the main characters remove storm clouds from the sky by thinking them away. I was hugely surprised that I couldn't find a template for evaporating clouds. It is one of the most useful and value for time tools that I have come across. Since I use it regularly, creating this template was a must. Here's the direct link to the Evaporating cloud Miro template.
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