Liminal design seeks likeminded revenue model for committed relationship
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Liminal design seeks likeminded revenue model for committed relationship
"The surging interest in liminality over the last 10 years from culture, academia, and corporations is not surprising: the future promise of technology has lost its shine despite unprecedented advances (Where is my jetpack?) but gained no patina or allure. We are fatigued with the plethora of flickering screens and the circus barking of online media's pandering for our attention."
"Liminal Productsare built to promote existentially active experiences: core social interaction, personal transformation, creativity, and explorations that challenge our perspective on ourselves and the world. Such engagements are not transactional, nor are they looking to increase productivity: they are designed to create distinct spaces for us to slow down, and for a moment set aside the noisy practicalities of the day-to-day world to explore the extraordinary and the unknown."
"Liminality has always been part of the human heritage: places of worship, art, rituals, or getting lost in a well-crafted book or film - all places and spaces connecting the in-between here and now, with the profound and ungraspable. These liminal experiences thrive on ambiguity and surprise. Can you build a business around the same? From transaction to experience The liminalist would ask: what explorations in a particular commercial context can promise something deeply meaningful that we cannot have in the ordin"
Liminality draws on deep-rooted cultural traditions to create experiences that occupy an in-between space between ordinary life and the profound. Liminal products promote existentially active engagements such as core social interaction, personal transformation, creativity, and perspective-challenging exploration. These experiences are intentionally non-transactional and not aimed at productivity; they create slowed, distinct spaces to set aside daily practicalities and explore ambiguity, surprise, and the unknown. Contemporary fatigue with incessant screens and attention-driven media fuels interest in liminal offerings. Businesses are exploring how to design commercially viable products that prioritize meaningful, personal experiences over utility and efficiency.
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