Digital Whiteboards Outlasted the "Remote Work Novelty" Phase and Became Permanent Infrastructure
Tools like Miro that surged during 2020-2021 remote work shifts have remained core infrastructure for hybrid teams rather than fading as offices reopened.
A reasonable prediction in 2021 might have been that digital whiteboard tools were a pandemic-specific bridge technology, useful only until in-person whiteboard sessions became available again. That prediction hasn't held up: hybrid work structures, where some team members are remote on any given day even at companies with physical offices, have kept tools like Miro as permanent infrastructure rather than a temporary substitute.
The underlying reason is straightforward — even teams with office access often have at least some remote participants in any given workshop or brainstorm, making a fully in-person-only whiteboard session impractical regardless of office availability. Digital whiteboarding solved a hybrid-work problem, not just a fully-remote one, which is why it has persisted.
Our Miro review covers its current feature set and template library in more depth.
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- This article was published on June 24, 2026. Kreemhunt dates every article so you can judge how current the information is.
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