PI Planning Template
Bring your team toward one vision and decide what stories to develop with the PI Planning Template. Manage your team's backlog, increase productivity, and build the foundation for a successful PI Planning event.
About the PI Planning Template
Many product teams and agile facilitators use PI Planning to align and bring teams towards one shared vision. PI Planning is supposed to happen in person, but since the rise of hybrid work, many teams run it remotely. Miro’s PI Planning Template helps you get an excellent overview of your PI Planning event, with step-by-step frames that will guide you through the whole process.
Keep reading to know more about how to use the PI Planning Template.
What is PI planning?
PI planning or “program increment planning” is a method for strategizing toward a shared vision among teams. In a PI planning event, teams, stakeholders, and project owners are assembled to review a program backlog and determine what direction the business will take next. Typically, organizations carry out PI planning every 8 to 12 weeks.
Benefits of PI planning
PI planning can be useful in a number of ways, and teams in various industries apply the PI methods to boost efficiency and productivity.
Establish face-to-face communication
One advantage of PI planning is that it enables all the various stakeholders and teams on a project to meet face-to-face and talk about the overall mission and goals. This is the crucial first step towards aligning all the different parties towards the same mission and goals.
Boost productivity
PI planning fosters cross-team and cross-Agile Release Team (ART) collaboration and establishes a clear backlog and schedule for when tasks should be completed. With teams syncing and communicating in the right way and focused on their own goals, overall team productivity improves.
Align team goals
One of the main goals of the PI planning process is to set clear goals and ensure that all stakeholders and team members are working towards that goal. Making sure that everyone understands and shares the same goal is the foundation of a unified team effort.
When to use PI planning
PI planning is part of the Scaled Agile Framework (SAFe), which is designed to help developers overcome the challenge of coordinating across teams, processes, and programs. In the SAFe model, teams are assembled into Agile Release Trains (ARTs), each of which works on a specific part of a broader goal.
To engage in PI planning, the Agile Release trains are brought together every 8 to 12 weeks. A PI planning event is an opportunity to step back and ensure everyone is still working toward the same business goals and is satisfied with the overall vision.
Create your PI Planning board
You can easily organize a PI Planning event remotely or in-person with Miro. Our PI Planning Template is divided into four parts:
Agenda
Program Board
ROAM Board
Teams Board
Read below to see how to use each part of the PI Planning Template:
PI Planning Agenda
Have a dedicated space to share the PI Planning schedule, where every participant will know what to expect and when. This will include all the PI Planning stages. Add a Program Backlog so you and your team know what still needs to be worked on.
Program Board (SAFe)
Here is where you and your team add milestones and iterations and how they correlate. Color-code tasks and connect them with lines and arrows to indicate flows and interdependencies. On the Program Board, you will overview features, dependencies, and milestones.
ROAM Board
A ROAM Board is where you and your team can see the program’s risks. That’s the moment to identify obstacles to achieving goals and decide how to proceed. Use the voting feature to perform the confidence vote.
Teams Board
Each team will have precise future iterations, tasks, and objectives moving forward. What’s on this frame needs to be included in the roadmap.
General considerations when running a PI Planning session:
Bring everyone together
Make sure all stakeholders, teammates, and project owners are present for the first all-hands planning session. For remote PI planning, you might choose to use video conferencing tools, which are widely used now.
Clarify team goals
Now, the team comes together to articulate the vision for the product or solution. Answer these questions: How are you filling customer needs? How have market changes impacted your ability to do so?
Draft a plan
Bring all these components together in a project management document for management and teams to review.
Tip: you can easily add Jira cards to your PI planning board to organize Jira issues and mark dependencies.
How do you do PI Planning?
A PI Planning event has a duration of 2 days, and it can be done remotely or in person. To run a successful PI Planning session, make sure that at the end of it you and your team come out with two things: committed PI Objectives and a Program Board where you will see the next milestones and delivery dates.
What are the PI planning stages?
The PI Planning event is divided into two days. On the first day, present your business context, draft a plan and manage and review blockers or constraints. The second day is meant to review your plan, evaluate program risks, perform the confidence vote and plan the rework and next steps.
Get started with this template right now.
Project Planning Template
Works best for:
Project Management, Project Planning
A project plan is a single source of truth that helps teams visualize and reach project milestones. Project plans are most useful when you outline the project’s “what” and “why” to anyone who needs to give you project buy-in. Use a project plan to proactively discuss team needs; expectations; and baselines for timeline, budget, and scope. The plan will also help you clarify available resources before you kick off a project, as well as expected deliverables at the end of the project.
Goals-based Roadmap
Works best for:
Roadmap, Planning, Mapping
The Goals-based Roadmap template enables teams to set clear objectives and chart a course for achieving them. By defining specific goals and milestones, teams can track progress and adapt their strategies accordingly. This template fosters accountability and transparency, ensuring that everyone is working towards common objectives. With a focus on outcomes, teams can prioritize initiatives that drive the greatest impact and value.
Event Planning Template
Works best for:
Planning, Workshops
Whether you’re planning a product launch, fully remote conference, or milestone event, the Event Planning Template will act as a visual checklist and map for all the details you need to consider before the big day. The Event Planning Template is an adaptable way to make sure the creative and strategic vision of your event doesn’t get lost in the details. By mapping out different sections - from the marketing plan, to the agenda, to snacks and swag for guests — you and your team can focus on the details most important to your functions, and collaborate as needed when overlaps occur.
What's on Your Radar Template
Works best for:
Business Management, Operations, Strategic Planning
Do you or your team feel overburdened by tasks? Having trouble focusing on particular problems? What’s on Your Radar is a thought exercise in which you plot ideas according to their importance or relevance. Designers and teams use what’s on your radar to ensure that their ideas are within the scope of a given project. They also rely on the method to assess whether a given solution is likely to solve the problem at hand. But even if you’re not a designer, the method can help assign priorities and ground your ideas in reality.
Meeting Notes Template
Works best for:
Business Management, Meetings
When your meeting is a success (and Miro will help make sure it is), participation will run high, brilliant ideas will be had, and decisions will be made. Make sure you don’t miss a single one — use our meeting notes template to track notes and feedback in a centralized place that the whole team can access. Just assign a notetaker before the meeting, identify the discussion topics, and let the notetaker take down the participants, important points covered, and any decisions made.
The Product Storyboard
Works best for:
Product Management, Planning
The Product Storyboard template enables product managers to visualize product experiences and user journeys. By mapping out key touchpoints, interactions, and scenarios, this template helps teams understand user needs and pain points. With sections for defining user personas, storyboarding user flows, and capturing feedback, it supports iterative product design and validation. This template serves as a storytelling tool for communicating product visions and guiding product development efforts towards delivering exceptional user experiences.