Lean Coffee by Michael de la Maza
Lean Coffee is a simple and easy-to-facilitate structure for meetings. Participants begin the meeting by creating the agenda. Then each topic is discussed in priority order using short timeboxes.
Where did 'Lean Coffee' come from?
Lean Coffee was created by Jim Benson and Jeremy Lightsmith in 2009 in Seattle.
Lean Coffee works best with groups of 10 people or less.
It is designed to be easy to facilitate.
This template was created by Michael de la Maza.
Get started with this template right now.
Reflection Island: End of Year Team Retro
Works best for:
Retrospectives, Agile Methodology, Meetings
The Reflection Island: End of Year Team Retro template offers a creative and themed approach to retrospectives, perfect for wrapping up the year. It provides elements for reflecting on achievements, challenges, and goals using a tropical island theme. This template enables teams to celebrate successes, learn from setbacks, and set intentions for the upcoming year in a relaxed and enjoyable atmosphere. By promoting reflection and celebration, the Reflection Island: End of Year Team Retro empowers teams to strengthen bonds, boost morale, and start the new year with renewed energy and focus effectively.
Feature Planning Template
Works best for:
Desk Research, Agile Methodology, Product Management
Features are what make a product or service fun, but adding new ones is no walk in the park. It takes many steps—ideating, designing, refining, building, testing, launching, and promoting—and just as many stakeholders. Feature Planning lets you put a smooth, sturdy process in place, so you can add a feature successfully, and spend less time and resources doing it. That makes our Feature Planning Template a smart starting point for anyone looking to add new product features, especially members of product, engineering, marketing, and sales teams.
Backlog Refinement with Jira Template
Works best for:
Agile, Backlog Refinement
The Backlog Refinement with Jira template in Miro improves collaboration among team members. It provides a visual and interactive space for teams to review, prioritize, and clarify upcoming work items together in real time. This collaborative approach ensures alignment on priorities and details, leading to a more organized and efficient workflow. The seamless integration with Jira automatically syncs all changes, reducing the need for manual updates and keeping both platforms up-to-date.
Soccer Retrospective
Works best for:
Agile Methodology, Retrospectives, Meetings
The Soccer Retrospective template offers a sports-themed approach to retrospectives, using the game of soccer as a metaphor for teamwork and strategy. It provides elements for reflecting on past performances, analyzing strengths and weaknesses, and setting goals for improvement. This template fosters a competitive yet collaborative spirit, encouraging team members to work together towards common objectives. By leveraging the metaphor of soccer, the Soccer Retrospective empowers teams to refine their tactics, enhance communication, and achieve their goals effectively.
Kaizen Report Template
Works best for:
Agile Methodology, Operations, Documentation
What makes a great company great? They know that greatness needs to be fostered and maintained — meaning they never stop working to improve. If you’re one of those companies (or aspire to be), a kaizen report is an ideal tool. It creates a simple visual guide to continuous improvement activities on a team, departmental, and organizational level. Using a kaizen report approach, every employee in an organization audits their own processes and understands what they might have overlooked, making this a powerful tool for increasing accountability at all levels.
Empathy Map Template
Works best for:
Market Research, User Experience, Mapping
Attracting new users, compelling them to try your product, and turning them into loyal customers—it all starts with understanding them. An empathy map is a tool that leads to that understanding, by giving you space to articulate everything you know about your customers, including their needs, expectations, and decision-making drivers. That way you’ll be able to challenge your assumptions and identify the gaps in your knowledge. Our template lets you easily create an empathy map divided into four key squares—what your customers Say, Think, Do, and Feel.