You want to think of the Haar measure $d\mu(U)$ as a way of measuring uniformity in the group $U(N)$ of unitary $N\times N$ matrices. 

To form your intuition, consider $N=1$. You then have $U=e^{i\phi}$, with $0<\phi\leq 2\pi$ and $d\mu(U)=d\phi$ measures the perimeter of the unit circle. This is a uniform measure, because $d(\phi+\phi_0)=d\phi$ for any fixed phase shift $\phi_0$. You could write the requirement of uniformity in the form $d\mu(UU_0)=d\mu(U)$, with $U_0=e^{i\phi_0}$ the unitary matrix corresponding to the phase shift $\phi_0$.

Once your intuition is formed for $N=1$, you simply generalize to $N>1$ using the same definition of uniformity, $d\mu(UU_0)=d\mu(U)$ for any fixed $U_0\in U(N)$. For orthogonal (or symplectic) matrices you use the same definition of uniformity, with $U_0$ now restricted to the orthogonal or symplectic subgroup of $U(N)$.

To explicitly write down the Haar measure $d\mu(U)$ in terms of the matrix elements of $U$ is only easily done for a few small values of $N$. (In particular, there is no relationship to random directions of rows or columns, as Yemon Choi pointed out.) You typically do not need such explicit expressions, since integrals with the Haar measure can be evaluated by using only the definition of uniformity.