We Used to Log Off, Reclaiming a Human Exit
As a branding curator, I recommend this thoughtful, humane exploration of why we removed escape from digital design. It frames exits as essential moments in product narratives, not failures.
The author argues that exits were treated as leaks, so platforms optimized retention over release. This essay shows how rebuilding safe exits can restore trust, clarity, and user dignity.
Read it if you design products that value people, not just metrics. You will gain practical frames, memorable language, and strategic moves to bring exits back into experience design.
The piece blends cultural history, user research, and design strategy, to explain why exits matter now. It traces how product incentives turned departure into loss, and retention into a virtue. You will encounter vivid examples, nuanced critique, and practical design patterns for graceful exits. The tone is clear, precise, and persuasive, appealing to leaders who care about long term relationships. For brand builders and UX strategists this article provides an ethical lens, and concrete ways to design respectful exits.
As a curator I endorse this reading, it will change how you measure product success. Share it with teams who build long lasting experiences, and leaders who set product principles today.
Source: uxdesign.cc