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Brainstorming a Great Name for Your Startup

Brainstorming a Great Name for Your Startup | Writing_me | Scoop.it
Naming your startup requires more than dreaming up something unusual and staking your claim. Here's how to create a business name that isn't a dud!
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Branding Strategy Insider | 33 Tips & Tactics For Generating Names

Branding Strategy Insider | 33 Tips & Tactics For Generating Names | Writing_me | Scoop.it
Alessandro Rea's insight:

Over the last decade we have generated new names for hundreds of companies, products and services. Here are some of the shortcuts, thought-starters and mental prods we've observed along the way.

 

1. Work Backwards From The Selling Proposition.
 Start by writing down an advertising headline, or a positioning statement, or a themeline for your product. Then work toward a name that reflects that marketing strategy. You have an instant coffee that tastes and smells like real ground roast. The name: TASTER’S CHOICE. Your new bath soap has so many oils and softeners that it leaves the skin silky soft to the touch. CARESS. Your chain of Mexican restaurants serves a mouth-watering range of that spicy cuisine. THE WHOLE ENCHILADA.

 

2. Spell It A Different Way.
A gelatin dessert came out as JELL-O. A fruit-based drink for kids came out as FROOT. An intentionally misspelled word could become your product’s name. Or company name: TOYS R US.

 

3. Go Against The Grain.
Study the competition. If everyone else is high-tech, think high-touch. If all the category names seem masculine try feminine. A hospital in Arkansas found that its competitors all had serious, straightforward names for their maternity centers — The Maternity Center or The Birthing Center. So this hospital called theirs STORK & COMPANY. The community loved it. There’s a long list of cars with 3-syllable names all ending with the letter “a”: Achieva, Aurora, Bravada, Celica, Corolla, Cressida, Integra, Maxima, Miata, Previa, Tredia. Et Cetera. If you were branding the next new model, maybe you’ll go against the grain.

 

4. Generate First, Judge Later.
Get yourself (or your task force) started by generating as many different names as you can. Write everything down. There are no bad ideas, yet. Save the judging for later. In a group session, try this penalty for saying, “What a lousy idea.” That person has to produce two more ideas for names.

 

5. Go For Quantity.
Don’t fall in love with a short list of two or three possible names. Develop lots of names. In a typical trademark search, you’ll lose at least 8 of every 10 names you generate. (Sometimes more.)

 

6. Try A Random Idea.
Creative consultant Roger von Oech suggests opening your mind to things that have nothing to do with a problem you’re working on. Open your dictionary to page 133 and pick the third word. Make that word relate to your naming need. (Could you use it as a metaphor?) Write down the name of your favorite sports team. How would it impact the project you’re working on? Random ideas can make your mind blossom.

 

7. Try For An Acronym.
VISTA. Volunteers In Service To America. MADD. Mothers Against Drunk Driving. FAST LANE. A bank’s Fully Automated Super Teller. Acronyms are hard to create. But if you can come up with an acronym that has real meaning, you’ve already built a marketing premise into your name.

 

8. Get Comfortable.
Get away from the phones. Get away from the office. Physically, you’ll do your best work on naming in a relaxed, comfortable environment. Emotionally, it should be an environment that says it’s okay to take chances.

 

9. Study Your Local Retailers.
They often come up with inventive, evocative names. What thought process are they using that you could use? BANANA REPUBLIC for khaki-based travel clothing. ONE NIGHT STAND for a women's boutique that rents high-priced designer clothing for special occasions. CREATURE COMFORTS for a pet groomer.

 

10. Manufacture A New Word.
Try putting together a new word from the parts of words you already have. In some cases, you can weld entire words together. It’s called constructional linguistics. A car plus a van yielded CARAVAN. Reporting on the news of the week yielded NEWSWEEK. Manufactured names are all around us. CITIBANK. NUTRASWEET. SUNKIST. BRIDGESTONE. KITCHENAID. WATERPIK. This is not a new technique. In the 1860s, a cheap and hard-wearing floor covering made from flax (“linum” in Latin) and oil (‘oleum”) was named LINOLEUM. The illustrious luncheon meat SPAM came from spiced ham. NABISCO was once the National Biscuit Company.

 

11. Conjure Up A Visual.
What would visually represent your company or product? An animal? A color? An ocean? A mountain? A visual concept may lead you to a name. A marketer was working on the name for a new sore throat medicine in a spray bottle. For the spray to hit its target, the mouth had to be opened fairly wide. This action created the image of a lion tamer sticking his head inside the lion’s mouth. The name — THROAT TAMER — and the concept of soothing the “roar” of sore throat pain weren’t far behind. Kollmorgen Corp. introduced a very thin DC motor for certain industrial applications. Its flatness was its advantage, and the key visual concept. Their successful name for this motor: THE PANCAKE.

 

12. Pick The Right Vocabulary Level.
The level of education and social status of the customer tend to dictate the most acceptable vocabulary. Scholastic or scientific language might be right for a pharmaceutical product. King’s English or the spoken language is right for most banking services. Grade-school vocabulary is better for many consumer products.

 

13. Think About Why It Will Be Used.
 A $100 pair of sneakers should make me faster and more agile. So, what suggests fast and agile? REEBOK is the name of a fleet-footed African gazelle. PUMA is the Spanish word for a large wild cat. (Would a Keds or a Converse make me that agile?).

 

14. Think About Where It Will Be Used.
 Imagine your product in the customer’s hands, actually being used. A marketer realized that many people like to dictate on their way to and from work. The COMMUTER was the name for a new portable dictating machine.

 

15. Borrow A Phrase From The Language.
Sears created a car battery that was tenacious and stubborn. The company borrowed the dictionary word DIE-HARD to describe this complex concept in a simple way. A linguist refers to this as “adapting a metaphor.” Another example: CLOSE-UP for a toothpaste that has lots of mouthwash in the formula. (It’s known as the kisser’s toothpaste in the trade.) Once upon a time, Dutch sailors used the expression “spiksplinternieuw” in speaking of a new ship. It meant the ship was new in every spike and splinter of wood. The British later Anglicized the phrase to “spick and spannew,” and U.S. sailors Americanized it to “spic and span.” All it took was an alert manufacturer of household detergents to seize the name: SPIC-AND-SPAN.

 

16. Use The Best Tools.
For serious naming efforts, there’s only one choice for a dictionary: The prodigious 13-volume Oxford English Dictionary. A distant second choice: Webster’s Third New International Dictionary. While you’re at it, use the best thesaurus. Forget the slender volumes that are in most offices. Get a fat one. One good choice: March’s Thesaurus. Even better: The Synonym Finder (by J.I. Rodale, Warner Books). It contains 1.5 million synonyms.

 

17. Go To Church.
In 1878, Procter & Gamble invented a new soap. It was white, very pure, and it floated. Harley Procter was struggling to find a name for it. Inspiration came one Sunday morning as he listened to the minister reading from Psalms 45:8 —"All thy garments smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory palaces, whereby they have made thee glad." Young Mr. Procter had found his name IVORY (Even though the actual substance ivory is not pure white in color, and it certainly doesn’t float!).

 

18. Listen To Your Customers.
Today, that means focus groups or online panels. Once upon a time, it was just a chance encounter. A Baltimore pharmacist was blending his own skin cream in the early 1900s. George Bunting sold it in small blue jars labeled “Dr. Bunting’s Sunburn Remedy.” Female customers who never ventured into the sun without a parasol raved about the cream. But George wanted a broader base of business. Then one day, a male customer entered the store and remarked that the sunburn remedy had miraculously cured his eczema (a painful inflammation of the skin). From that chance remark, Dr. Bunting’s Sunburn Remedy became NOXZEMA.

 

19. Think Of The Name As A Promise.
What attribute or benefit can you capture? The cold remedy NYQUIL was coined from the fragments “ny” (from night) and “quil” (from tranquil). The promise of a tranquil night’s sleep. "Raise your arm if you’re SURE" is the message from an aptly-named deodorant. Linguists have observed that a name is much more than a sound. It is also a bundle of associations.

 

20. Go Foreign.
Look for translations of root words, core words, relevant terms. Mitsubishi (whose symbol is three diamonds) found DIAMANTE as the name for its new luxury car. VOLVO means “I roll” in Latin. OREO means “hill” in Greek. (The original version of the cookie was mound-shaped, not flat.) Decaffeinated coffee was introduced in Europe. SANKA is a contraction of the French phrase, “sans caffein.” The owner of a small winery described his efforts to a friend as a “labor of love.” That become the winery’s name. The idiomatic expression in French is TRAVAIL DU COEUR.

 

21. Have A Computer Do The Work.
Several software programs exist for creating company and product names. Or you could create your own by using a program that "mates" words in column A with words in column B. Computers don’t have much judgment, of course. They don’t have marketing orientations or linguistic awareness. But they’ll certainly spew out lots of possibilities.

 

22. Purchase An Existing Name.
A bank paid $10,000 to acquire another bank’s name for a cash management service that was no longer being marketed. A perfume company paid a million dollars for the rights to one name. (The name already had been cleared and registered in 70 countries.) Coors licensed the name of its upscale beer IRISH RED from a long-defunct brewery. If a name you covet is owned by someone else, but is dormant or little used, go after it. Have an intermediary (such as a trademark attorney) make an offer. You have nothing to lose.

 

23. Take The Time To Eavesdrop.
You never know what you’ll hear. A well-known sleep aid was named by a fellow who overheard a group of people leaving the theatre late in the evening. "Night, all," they called to each other. "Night, all." This alert listener had his new name: NYTOL.

 

24. Eschew Initials.
Studies have shown that all-initial names are as much as 40% less memorable than names that use actual or made-up words. If you doubt that, just look at the all-initial names of companies in the Fortune 500. How many do you really recognize? (Do you recognize UST or SPX or NCH?).

 

25. Say It Out Loud.
Names should be pleasing to the ear as well as to the eye. Imagine how many times each day your new name will be said over the phone. Just altering a word's formation may produce a better sound. The origins of both these words suggest "warm" or "loving." But CALIDA is more pleasing to the ear than CALIDUS.

 

26. Summon A Suffix.
Suffixes play a special role in developing new names. Would one of these be useful? -ime, -in are frequently used for medicines and chemical substances (ANACIN, BUFFERIN, LISTERINE).
-oid normally means “resembling” or “having the form of’ (CELLULOID, POLAROID).
-ex is often used to imply “excellent” or to give prestige to a name (ROLEX, KLEENEX, PLAYTEX).
-elle is a feminine suffix that adds grace and softness (the triangular-shaped diamond TRIELLE).

 

27. Put The Benefit Right Into The Name.
A perfume named PASSION. A deodorant named NO SWEAT. An all-terrain vehicle named EXPLORER. A long-lasting, wear-resistant polyethylene named DURATION.

 

28. Find A Big Brother.
Someone in an allied field might give you the name you need. If you’re naming the company’s newsletter, for instance, look at the names of metropolitan newspapers. But go beyond the obvious ones like Times, Herald or Gazette. You’ll also find some novel coinages. In Seattle, there’s the POST-INTELLIGENCER. In California, the Sacramento BEE. In North Carolina, the High Point ENTERPRISE.

 

29. Start With An Unusual Letter.
In the English language, words most commonly start with these five initial letters: S,C,P,A and T. The five least common are X, Z, Y, Q and K. One out of eight words starts with an S. One out of 3,000 starts with an X. George Eastman coined the name KODAK for a variety of reasons. It was short, unusual, vigorous. "The letter K," he said, "has been a favorite with me — it seemed a strong, incisive sort of letter."

 

30. Repeat The Same Sound.
The rhythmic cadence of a name can affect its appeal and memorability. KODAK uses the same sound as bookends for the name. Listen to the repetition of sound in a name such as FRUIT OF THE LOOM. Or COCA-COLA.

 

31. Unfold Your Map.
Place names can become product names. The slip-on loafer is believed to have evolved from a Norwegian shoe called the clog. Henry Bass, a cobbler from Maine, named his loafer the WEEJUN after the final two syllables of "Norwegian." A Massachusetts cookie company installed a new machine that could wrap cookie dough around jam. The first jam the company tried was made from figs. Their policy was to name their products after neighboring towns, so Newton, Massachusetts, was duly honored. Hence, FIG NEWTONS.

 

32. Reverse The Natural Order Of Things.
General Ambrose Everett Burnside was the commander of the Army of the Potomac during the American Civil War. His most distinguishing feature (which launched a trend) was his profuse side-whiskers, growing down along the ears to the cheeks. They were called “burnsides.” Around the turn of the century, the word experienced a linguistic transposition and became SIDEBURNS. The holding company for Pathmark supermarkets could have given itself the prosaic name of General Supermarkets Corp. Instead, it was transposed to SUPERMARKETS GENERAL.

 

33. Borrow An Idea.
Thomas Edison once said that ideas have to be original only in their adaptation to the problem you’re working on. Military designers borrowed from Picasso’s art to create better camouflage patterns for tanks. So go ahead. Borrow one of these ideas.




Sponsored By: The Brand Positioning Workshop

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9 Rejected Android OS Food Names

9 Rejected Android OS Food Names | Writing_me | Scoop.it
If the new Android OS name, Kit Kat, left you sobbing into a celebratory key lime pie, there are plenty of other foods that might never be part of the Google family.
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Fascinating Origins Behind The Names Of Popular Tech Companies

Fascinating Origins Behind The Names Of Popular Tech Companies | Writing_me | Scoop.it
We say words like Google, Apple, Intel, etc. without thinking about where the names came from. This explains the origin of the names of some tech companies.
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How to Name Things

10 free tools to help you name companies, ideas, products, websites and campaigns. Also useful when running brainstorms, writing copy (especially for social med
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Using Data to Pick the Optimal Name for Your Startup

Using Data to Pick the Optimal Name for Your Startup | Writing_me | Scoop.it

Naming your startup can be one of the hardest things to do when starting a company. Each founder must agree. The domain must be available to buy. Last and perhaps most importantly, investors need to like it because the first letter of startup's name has meaningful impact on how easily the company will be able to raise money.

Whatever you do, don't pick a name that starts with the letter J. Or K. Or Q. Instead, favor names beginning with T, O and A.

Below is a chart showing the share of capital raised by startups broken down by the first letter of their names for Series A rounds of IT companies in 2013. The data is normalized for the number of startups with each letter-name. Startups with T-names raise 100% more capital during the Series A than the average startup. Startups with the letter A garner 50% larger investments. On the other hand, founders who mistakenly chose J-words raised 50% less capital in 2013, quite a disadvantage in the market.

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How to Name a Product - 10 Tips for Product Naming Success

How to Name a Product - 10 Tips for Product Naming Success | Writing_me | Scoop.it
Learn 10 essential tips for how to name a product that is positioned for acceptance, memorability, and long-term success.
Alessandro Rea's insight:
1. Be Descriptive

The first place most people start when they have to name a product is to simply create a name that describes what the product does. Microsoft’s Internet Explorer product is a perfect example of a descriptive name. Consumers use it to explore the Internet. It can’t get more descriptive than that!

2. Use Real Words with a Twist

Words don’t have to be used literally in product. They can be suggestive like Ford’s Mustang (it’s fast and sleek) or Ford’s Expedition (it’s built for adventure).

3. Add a Prefix or Suffix

You can turn a common word into a product name simply by adding a prefix or suffix to it. Apple uses this product naming technique all the time with the iPhone, iPad, and iPod offering perfect examples.

4. Create a Compound Word

Since so many brand and product names are already trademarked and the associated domain names have already been registered, it’s very common these days for product names to be compound words made by putting two words together to form an entirely new brand or product name. PhotoShop, TurboTax, and Stickups are great examples.

5. Make up a Word

One way to ensure your product name is unique is to make up a word. Gatorade, Fritos, Doritos, and Tostitos are popular examples.

6. Change Spellings

Products like Trix, Kix, Fantastik, and Liquid-Plumr use real words that are misspelled. It’s creative and helps when the name you want is already trademarked or the related domain names are already taken.

7. Tweak and Blend Words

When a single word or a compound word won’t do, you can tweak and blend words to create a brand or product name. For example, Nyquil is a tweak and blend of night and tranquil.  Pictionary is a tweak and blend of picture and dictionary.

8. Use a Place or Person’s Name

The Clark Bar was named after its creator, David L. Clark. The George Foreman Grill was named after its celebrity endorser. However, use caution when including a place or person’s name in your product name. A day may come when you want to expand out of that geographic area or the person whose name you used in the product name might leave to work for a competitor or in another industry. Make sure your product name can withstand these types of changes.

9. Create an Acronym or Use Initials or Numbers

Acronyms and initials are short, but they don’t say much on their own. Therefore, you need to exercise caution when you use an acronym or initials in your product name. It typically takes longer to develop brand recognition and comprehension with a name filled with numbers and letters that is difficult to remember. However, many companies have achieved great success in launching products with names that use numbers and letters. Honda’s CRV, Toyota’s Rav4, and even Formula 409 are examples of how this naming technique can work.

10. Use a Verb

You can use a verb as your product name (like Bounce dryer sheets or Apple’s iPod Shuffle) or you can turn a word used in your product name into a verb. For example, the Skype application name has turned into a verb over the years. Today, it’s common to say, “Skype me later and we’ll talk.” The Swiffer product name is also used as a verb sometimes. It’s not uncommon for a Swiffer user to say, “Look at that dust! I have to Swiffer that.”

As you can see, it’s okay to get creative when you name a product. As long as consumers are willing to accept the message and promise that your product name communicates, then you’re on the path to success. That’s why it’s so important that you follow the 10 steps to name a brand (or product) that I provided in my previous post here on the AYTM blog. When you combine those steps with the 10 tips above, you can confidently name a product or brand. For more timeless brand and product naming tips, read 33 Tips and Tactics for Generating Names from Devon Thomas Treadwell on Branding Strategy Insider.

Stay tuned for my upcoming post that will dive into more detail about the research that goes into identifying, testing, and monitoring a brand or product name.

 

- See more at: http://aytm.com/blog/research-junction/how-to-name-a-product-10-tips-for-product-naming-success/#sthash.uQ3XcBtt.dpuf

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Dental Practice Names & Dental Website Domains…Different Animals

Dental Practice Names & Dental Website Domains…Different Animals | Writing_me | Scoop.it
Zebras and tigers both have stripes, but they are very different. For instance, even in a pinch, I wouldn’t ride a tiger. I also wouldn’t advise petting or hand feeding a tiger. A zebra, on the other hand, sure!
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What’s in a Name? Top 5 Influential Brands of 2013! [Infograph]

What’s in a Name? Top 5 Influential Brands of 2013! [Infograph] | Writing_me | Scoop.it
According to Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon.com, “your brand is formed primarily, not by what your company says about itself, but what the company does.” 
Thanks to the ever-evolving wonders...
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5 Tips to Better Brand Names

5 Tips to Better Brand Names | Writing_me | Scoop.it
A crucial element of any business is the creation of a brand name by which [...]...
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