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One World, One Font? Why Bic Wants Your One-of-a-Kind Handwriting. The French pen maker is collecting handwriting from all over the planet to build a universal typeface. Here's how you can have a hand in the cool experiment.

By Kim Lachance Shandrow

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

There's only one you and no one writes exactly like you. Aww, you're special.

And that's why Bic wants you to add your unique handwriting to its ambitious Universal Typeface Experiment. That and we're pretty sure the ballpoint pen maker also wants you reach for its pens, not its competitors', the next time you jot something down between tweets and texts. (Yes, people still do actually write from time to time. We think.)

As part a clever, crowdsourced marketing campaign/research endeavor, Bic is collecting writing samples online from people across the globe. The goal: To merge them into a single font.

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Bic calls it the Universal Typeface. But we're not sure how "universal" capturing letters only from the Roman alphabet is. What about Arabic, Khmer, Japanese and other, more diverse writing systems?

So far, the experiment has racked up some nearly 863,000 characters from 110 countries.

One World, One Font? Why Bic Wants Your One-of-a-Kind Handwriting.

A screenshot of Bic's Universal Typeface "Country" page.
Image credit: Bic's Universal Typeface Experiment UI/platform

What does the world's first, or so Bic claims, "universal" handwriting look like? So far, it appears somewhat surprisingly neat and clean. No frills. No flair. Seems like participants are putting their best finger forward.

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Also odd is the fact there's no (Bic) pen required for an effort that "celebrates the pen we all know and use," according to the official press release promoting it. Your fingers alone do the trick. Ink? What's that?

To contribute your unique handwriting, go to Bic's special website for the experiment. From here, you'll see a URL to enter into your mobile device's web browser, along with a code to enter. (Of course, you'll also see a link to Bic's product website.)

Once you're in Bic's mobile Universal Typeface Experiment site, you'll be prompted to finger swipe your one-of-a-kind versions of the 26 letters of the classical Latin alphabet, all in uppercase and strangely out of alphabetical order.

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One World, One Font? Why Bic Wants Your One-of-a-Kind Handwriting.

The writer's letter B Bic Universal Typeface Experiment submission, compared against the average letter B submission.
Image credit: Bic's Universal Typeface Experiment UI/platform

After you've fingered in all the letters (I did it by thumb, though I can imagine my parents would use their index fingers), you'll be prompted to go back to Bic's font project desktop website (on your laptop or PC). From there you can share your scrawlings anonymously or with your Facebook friends.

But before you do, it gets kind of personal. You'll be asked if you're a righty or a lefty, how old you are, whether you're male or female, which country you live in, and, finally, what your occupation is (from a very limited set of broad industry choices). You can explore letter pool averages for each category.

After you jump through the requisite demographics hoops, you'll be treated to an animated show of your contributions, compared against the experiment's current average. It's worth the effort, mostly.

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The averages are crunched via some fancy algorithm that merges all of the input and aggregates the result into an "ever-changing and always evolving typeface." Most of my sloppy excuses for graphemes are a smidge longer, fatter and taller than the average, more confirmation of what the nuns barked at me back in Catholic school. I have sinfully bad penmanship.

If you want to pitch your penmanship in, you have until August to do so, when, sometime during the month, Bic will reveal the first official version of the Universal Typeface. Should you like what you see, you'll be able to download it and use it just as you would Arial, Courier New or any other font. I'll stick with my old standby, Times New Roman, thank you.

Related: 7 Strategies to Boost Mobile Conversion Rates

Kim Lachance Shandrow

Former West Coast Editor

Kim Lachance Shandrow is the former West Coast editor at Entrepreneur.com. Previously, she was a commerce columnist at Los Angeles CityBeat, a news producer at MSNBC and KNBC in Los Angeles and a frequent contributor to the Los Angeles Times. She has also written for Government Technology magazine, LA Yoga magazine, the Lowell Sun newspaper, HealthCentral.com, PsychCentral.com and the former U.S. Surgeon General, Dr. C. Everett Coop. Follow her on Twitter at @Lashandrow. You can also follow her on Facebook here

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