What Unlio Is Designed For
Unlio is designed for initiatives with a clear goal.
It is intended for situations where people want to understand what is being proposed, how it is progressing, and how they can participate.
Unlio Focuses on Initiatives
An initiative is a concrete effort. Examples include:
- organizing a local event
- proposing a change in a neighborhood
- coordinating a volunteer project
- supporting a specific public proposal
Each initiative has a stated goal. Discussion and participation are connected to that goal.
Open discussions can also take place on Unlio. They help people explore ideas, ask questions, and clarify proposals. Over time, a discussion may lead to the creation of a new initiative.
How Participation Works
Participation on Unlio is tied to a specific initiative.
- People decide whether to participate.
- Their involvement is visible within that initiative.
- Updates and discussions remain connected to the stated goal.
This makes it clear what someone is supporting and how they are involved.
How Initiatives Are Found
Initiatives are meant to be discovered because they are relevant.
Relevance may depend on:
- a place
- a topic
- a shared interest
- an existing connection
Visibility is not based only on reactions. The focus is on helping people find initiatives that matter to them.
What Unlio Does Not Replace
Unlio does not replace professional or administrative systems.
A construction project, for example, may involve detailed legal, technical, and contractual processes. Those processes remain in the systems where they are managed.
Unlio provides a structured overview of initiatives so that people can understand them and choose whether to participate.