Have you ever seen a very interesting humorous ceremony in a humorous ceremony? I have witnessed one person each day. This kind of ceremony is a ceremony where you and many people I know participate. This kind of ceremony goes to school. Everyone is doing this now. The interesting reason is that we get up early every day, learn things you do not need, eat terrible food and pay the price, you will be in trouble to become a person. Everyone said: "Every work, play will not make Jack a boring boy." This is a very real statement even if my name is not Jack.
It is ritual to bring visitors to Google Buffet. It is ritual to walk on Facebook's promenade. It is ritual to buy popcorn in movies and buy hot dogs in games. Try on clothes is a ritual, shopping is a ritual. User experience is ritual. Many self-service applications rely on 21 day usage. This is an ordinance. Experience is often a ritual. Also, if you know that someone emphasizes experience, create valuable experiences. Think of the user experience as 360 degree 24 hour customer experience interaction. Today, Google breaks down user's journey into a series of micro-moments: countless interactive opportunities, rewards (like "Thank you"), and happy pop music (see Kiip)
The ceremony is accomplished by separating us from normal real-world experience. In classical anthropological analogies developed by Arnold Van Gennep and Victor Turner rituals are said to open the way between identities. The door has a marginal space that anthropologists call. The word "liminal" is derived from the Latin threshold, which is the framework that exists between rooms. Critical spaces exist outside the normal identity framework, so extraordinary things can happen in it. With the help of ceremonial guides, stories, symbols, and a series of detailed ritual procedures, people pass through the marginal space and transform in the process. Once the ceremony is completed, participants can adopt their new identity, that is, their version freed from restrictions previously restricting their behavior.
Ritual (rich as boots) o n. The ceremony is an established procedure for every ritual, religious or other ritual. Each denomination has rules governing rituals of church worship. There is a strict ceremony in the opening ceremony of each new parliament. The general meeting of shareholders tends to follow the procedural ritual. In addition to these fixed rules, the ceremony can be applied to any fixed behavior pattern such as a ceremonial hat covering a woman, or a ceremony to clean and clean a pipe. W. Som -