Remote work is bigger than ever, and both services have grown their userbases as a result. It looks like both companies know that a rising tide raises all business software ships. By making it easier to work together, both services will keep riding the wave of increasing remote work.

What to Expect

If your company relies on Google Workspace, Miro, or both, then your options have expanded. Miro’s new app will let users stay within the Workspace software while quickly launching Miro at the same time. They’ll be able to collaborate on both new and existing Miro boards without switching away from their Workspace app. Google Meet attendees can launch Miro from their activities panel, with no Miro sign-ins or sign-ups required for everyone in the meet: Instead, they’ll all get guest access that lets them start a board and save it for up to 24 hours. It’s a small change, but as anyone who uses multiple communication apps regularly can tell you, the need to switch back and forth can easily lead to missed messages. Just one miscommunication can delay an important confirmation by a day, a week, or worse.

Miro Loves Google Integrations

Miro must be getting a lot out of teaming up with Google’s popular Workspace ecosystem. They’ve already released a “Miro for Google Calendar” app, and Miro boards also support integrations with Docs, Sheets, and Slides. The announcement also hints at the challenge every communication software faces: Finding ways to “foster rich collaboration equity,” by figuring out what barriers are keeping some people from giving and receiving all the valuable information their team can offer them. Miro isn’t wasting time, either, as the new Google Meet integration is already live on Miro’s website.

Is Google Meet Best for You?

Here at Tech.co, we keep tabs on all the top video communcation software solutions, and we’ve covered the many advances Google Meet’s tech has made in past months, from adding new multitasking tools and upping the cap on mobile participants to less exciting developments like rolling back its 24-hour limit on free group calls to just one hour. Ultimately, Google Meet is a dependable, feature-packed service, even if we think a few other services — namely GoToMeeting, Zoom, and RingCentral — are best for business web conferencing overall. And now, assuming you need a good whiteboard-style visual collaboration tool to use in your team meetings, Google Meet’s looking more attractive than ever.