Taste is a Quiet Luxury
Musings captured, sorted, in collaboration with AI. One of my favorite blogs is that of Matt Webb, the great mind behind Poem/1, the watch that tells time through poems. This isn't about the poem but about one of his latest pieces. He wrote a piece on how we've seemingly moved from designing the cool stuff we saw in Star Trek to the absurd things in Douglas Adams' "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy." Part of me welcomes this, as it might mean we also venture a bit away from...
Agents are NPCs with Main Character Energy.
This is a collection of some loosely connected thoughts sorted, altered, transcribed with AI Only a few of us "old ones" may remember Anna from IKEA, or Clippy from the Windows 98 era—those early days of chatbots. But lately, my thoughts have been occupied by chatbots again, partly because of my fascination with Intents (the Web3 ones) and partly with generative AI. I vividly recall around 2016, when I was deeply fascinated by those bots or conversational UIs and considered them the future. I...
Tokens == Attention
Tokens: Traceable, Tradeable, Productized AttentionThese are just early thoughts—ramblings, really. What the Hell Are Tokens, Actually? When I first stumbled onto the blockchain, there was only Bitcoin. The BTC narrative was pretty straightforward for someone like me: a decentralized payment ledger, with BTC as the currency. Simple enough. Then Ethereum showed up, and my understanding of tokens started to evolve. Initially, I saw tokens as transaction fees—a way to play the game. But then the...
Taste is a Quiet Luxury
Musings captured, sorted, in collaboration with AI. One of my favorite blogs is that of Matt Webb, the great mind behind Poem/1, the watch that tells time through poems. This isn't about the poem but about one of his latest pieces. He wrote a piece on how we've seemingly moved from designing the cool stuff we saw in Star Trek to the absurd things in Douglas Adams' "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy." Part of me welcomes this, as it might mean we also venture a bit away from...
Agents are NPCs with Main Character Energy.
This is a collection of some loosely connected thoughts sorted, altered, transcribed with AI Only a few of us "old ones" may remember Anna from IKEA, or Clippy from the Windows 98 era—those early days of chatbots. But lately, my thoughts have been occupied by chatbots again, partly because of my fascination with Intents (the Web3 ones) and partly with generative AI. I vividly recall around 2016, when I was deeply fascinated by those bots or conversational UIs and considered them the future. I...
Tokens == Attention
Tokens: Traceable, Tradeable, Productized AttentionThese are just early thoughts—ramblings, really. What the Hell Are Tokens, Actually? When I first stumbled onto the blockchain, there was only Bitcoin. The BTC narrative was pretty straightforward for someone like me: a decentralized payment ledger, with BTC as the currency. Simple enough. Then Ethereum showed up, and my understanding of tokens started to evolve. Initially, I saw tokens as transaction fees—a way to play the game. But then the...
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TL;DR:
Forget traditional design in emergent markets; it's all about market alchemy. Our role transcends mere aesthetics, venturing into creating and shaping uncharted market territories. Think of ourselves as modern Silk Road builders, not just connecting points but fostering entire ecosystems. This is design as a guiding beacon, turning great ideas into new market realities. Let's not just fit into markets; let's imagine, prototype and manifest them.
In the whirlwind of early-stage emergent market product design, we often find ourselves obsessed with 'good design,' like custom icons, fancy animated landing pages, and bespoke typefaces. However, the true essence of design in emergent markets, where no markets yet exist, lies in market making.
This revelation, inspired by discussions with my thought-partner Shuya, is that design is akin to market alchemy. We are not just fitting into markets; we're actively shaping them. If we merely fit in, we become quickly replaceable. Our design toolkit is for more than just aesthetics; it's for imagining, prototyping, and testing new markets, guiding the world through clear storytelling.
Imagine a market as uncharted as a distant galaxy. Our role as designers extends beyond placing products; it involves creating the universe for them to thrive. Design serves as both our paintbrush and compass in the wilderness of market creation.
We should embrace the role of modern-day Silk Road builders, not just connecting points but fostering cultural movements. Like the Silk Road, which transformed history through cultural and commercial exchange, our design is about creating ecosystems that spur market and cultural evolution. Imagine a new path, establish a market, and culture always will flourish.
This perspective deeply influences my approach to design. The most compelling projects are like digital Silk Roads, carving out and nurturing new markets and cultural dynamics. This goes beyond fitting products into existing markets; it's about exploring uncharted territories and cultivating them into vibrant hubs of activity.
Balancing the evolving product with brand storytelling and design expertise is challenging. True influence in design doesn't come from following trends but from unlocking new markets.
If you want that promised seat at the grown up table, we need to do more than apply good taste in design; sometimes, we're tasked with creating it. Our role isn't just about pushing pixels; it's about drafting blueprints for new markets. As designers, especially those adept at coding, we have the power to not just envision but also test potential markets.
The key takeaway is that great ideas don't just fit into markets; design can elevate these ideas and create the markets themselves. With the right design and storytelling, imagined markets manifest with proper prototyping. Design in early-stage ventures is about inviting exploration into new realms, using design as a guiding beacon. At its core, design is about imagining and articulating multiple futures compellingly.
If you're merely investing in existing markets, you're late to the game. Use the design toolkit to create and shape new markets.
(Slide into my DMs on the BirdApp if you want to explore this further)
TL;DR:
Forget traditional design in emergent markets; it's all about market alchemy. Our role transcends mere aesthetics, venturing into creating and shaping uncharted market territories. Think of ourselves as modern Silk Road builders, not just connecting points but fostering entire ecosystems. This is design as a guiding beacon, turning great ideas into new market realities. Let's not just fit into markets; let's imagine, prototype and manifest them.
In the whirlwind of early-stage emergent market product design, we often find ourselves obsessed with 'good design,' like custom icons, fancy animated landing pages, and bespoke typefaces. However, the true essence of design in emergent markets, where no markets yet exist, lies in market making.
This revelation, inspired by discussions with my thought-partner Shuya, is that design is akin to market alchemy. We are not just fitting into markets; we're actively shaping them. If we merely fit in, we become quickly replaceable. Our design toolkit is for more than just aesthetics; it's for imagining, prototyping, and testing new markets, guiding the world through clear storytelling.
Imagine a market as uncharted as a distant galaxy. Our role as designers extends beyond placing products; it involves creating the universe for them to thrive. Design serves as both our paintbrush and compass in the wilderness of market creation.
We should embrace the role of modern-day Silk Road builders, not just connecting points but fostering cultural movements. Like the Silk Road, which transformed history through cultural and commercial exchange, our design is about creating ecosystems that spur market and cultural evolution. Imagine a new path, establish a market, and culture always will flourish.
This perspective deeply influences my approach to design. The most compelling projects are like digital Silk Roads, carving out and nurturing new markets and cultural dynamics. This goes beyond fitting products into existing markets; it's about exploring uncharted territories and cultivating them into vibrant hubs of activity.
Balancing the evolving product with brand storytelling and design expertise is challenging. True influence in design doesn't come from following trends but from unlocking new markets.
If you want that promised seat at the grown up table, we need to do more than apply good taste in design; sometimes, we're tasked with creating it. Our role isn't just about pushing pixels; it's about drafting blueprints for new markets. As designers, especially those adept at coding, we have the power to not just envision but also test potential markets.
The key takeaway is that great ideas don't just fit into markets; design can elevate these ideas and create the markets themselves. With the right design and storytelling, imagined markets manifest with proper prototyping. Design in early-stage ventures is about inviting exploration into new realms, using design as a guiding beacon. At its core, design is about imagining and articulating multiple futures compellingly.
If you're merely investing in existing markets, you're late to the game. Use the design toolkit to create and shape new markets.
(Slide into my DMs on the BirdApp if you want to explore this further)
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