The Norman start-up Lili for Life presents a new version of its Lili lamp and unveils a screen intended for dyslexic people.
The Norman company Lili for Life, which develops innovative lighting solutions intended to overcome the reading difficulties and discomfort linked to dyslexia, has just unveiled a new version of its Lili lamp. Always made in France, the new version of the Norman lamp, presented at CES in Las Vegas in early 2023 and which was a great success with more than 2,000 units sold, undergoes several aesthetic and technical improvements. otherwise, its selling price has been revised downwards, and the company undertakes to continue this optimization in collaboration with BIM industries, known for being the originator of the Lizia lamp and the Athana cryotherapy device. At the origin of this partnership, the public investment bank, which encourages French start-ups to innovate and manufacture in France, with its industrial priming diagnostic device.
A solution to an invisible and little-known disability
While dyslexia has been recognized in France since 2005 as a disability, and that it concerns nearly 8% of the population according to the High Authority of Health (HAS), its visual causes had not been clearly formulated until the work of two French researchers, Albert Le Floch and Guy Ropars, awarded by the National Academy of Medicine in 2020. The latter identified dyslexia as being linked to visual disorders that can be corrected by lighting technologies. (strobe light). It was with the acquisition of these exclusive rights that the Lili for Life adventure began.. The start-up's mission is to raise awareness of the issue of dyslexia and to develop innovative technologies.. The lamp helps alleviate reading difficulties, allowing dyslexic people to regain self-confidence.
First commercial successes
Since its launch on the market, the Lili lamp has received numerous testimonials from customers sharing their experience. Lili has also developed an offer for businesses, in order not only to raise awareness among employees and employers of this taboo and little-known disability, but also to provide a French solution resulting from French research. Aware of the extent of dyslexia in the world of work, several large groups have already benefited from this offer.
The Lili for Life lamp is currently available on the Lili for Life website (www.liliforlife.com) and in Boulanger brands, Fnac, Darty and Atol.