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A great name isn't just catchy. It must be original within its category, linguistically easy for the brain to process ('processing fluent'), and contain an element of surprise that grabs attention and makes it memorable.
If your brand name is hard to pronounce or requires an explanation, it adds friction for the consumer. According to Wondery's founder, now is the time to rebrand if you're still early, as the cost of lost brand equity is minimal.
The name "Dollar Shave Club" was chosen for its functional clarity, immediately communicating the value proposition: affordable razors via subscription. This strategy removes ambiguity and allows potential customers to understand the business on first contact, a crucial advantage for a new market entrant.
The Browser Company of New York used a 150-year-old naming style ("The [Product] Company of [Location]"). This juxtaposition of an old convention with a modern product was a powerful way to signal original thinking and stand out in a crowded market.
Defaulting to an uninspired name and logo (e.g., a family name with a roof icon) puts a business at an immediate disadvantage. In a saturated market, a unique brand is not a luxury but a foundational tool that provides marketing lift and prevents you from getting lost in the noise.
The competitor's name, 'Practice,' was a significant liability because it was impossible to search for, track mentions, or differentiate from other tools. This made organic marketing and competitive intelligence incredibly difficult, contributing to their lack of visibility despite being well-funded. A unique, searchable name is a marketing asset.
The company was almost named "Delicious Designs," a generic name. The breakthrough came when they realized their simple, descriptive tagline, "The Edible Arrangement," was the most powerful and memorable name because it clearly communicated the product's value proposition.
To find an original name, don't just look within your industry. Explore diverse domains like mythology, science, or aerodynamics. The goal is to map out a wide 'ocean' of possibilities before diving in, ensuring you discover unique concepts instead of defaulting to industry jargon.
Avoid clichés like a fountain pen for a copywriting service. Instead, choose a distinctive asset (mascot, sound) that has no inherent meaning in your category. This prevents confusion with competitors and makes your brand easier to recall, like Gong's bulldog mascot for sales intelligence.
Adam White credits his company's success to its expansive name over his original, narrow idea, "Executive Report." A broader brand identity allowed for expansion into various verticals and sounded more appealing, which a niche, descriptive name would have constrained from the start.
The path to a great name is paved with mediocre ones. The key is embracing quantity to find quality. Teams that stop after generating only 50-100 names get stuck, whereas a professional process might explore over 2,000 possibilities to uncover a true gem.