Six Types of New Business Names: Which One is Right For Your Product or Company?

Whether you?re trying to name a new company or rename an existing product, it?s far from easy to generate a name that sounds great, looks cool, means what you want it to and sets you apart from all the competition.<br><br>Narrow down the range of possibilities by first figuring out which of these six types of names you prefer.<br><br>I. Made-up Names<br>Examples: Verizon, Intel, Centuria, Zumasys<br><br>People seem to either love made-up names or hate them. On the one hand, they offer a blank slate for branding ? if you?ve got the budget to hammer them into the public?s consciousness. And on the other hand, they tend to have a cold, bureaucratic, big-business and inhuman tone.<br><br>II. Descriptive Names<br>Examples: 5 Minute Oil Change, Paycheck Loans, Diapers.com<br><br>These are no-nonsense names that make it really clear what the company or product does, but they usually cannot be trademarked. While they communicate well, they can be downright dull.<br><br>III. Proper Names<br>Examples: Wells Fargo, Brooks Brothers, John Hancock, New England Estates<br><br>These can be family names, first names, geographic names and even fictional names that conjure up a specific person or a place. Proper names can be restrictive on your future expansion and make your company harder to sell. On the other hand, they can help root you in a community or highlight the founders. They?re especially good for local companies and common in the fashion and financial industries, among others.<br><br>IV. Suggestive Names<br>Examples: Greyhound, Staples, Mustang, Blackberry<br><br>Here the names feature a word or a phrase that suggests a quality with which the company or product wishes to be linked. On the one hand they can be easy to remember, spell and pronounce and highly appealing to the public. They also lend themselves to vivid logos, but it may be hard to find a good one that?s not already in use by a giant in another industry.<br><br>V. Compound Names<br>Examples: MailChimp, DieHard, YouTube<br><br>Popular for online companies, these involve taking two disparate ideas and combining them. Each element is recognizable in the compound, but there may be one element that carries most of the meaning while the other is somewhat arbitrary. They might be presented as two words or as one, and they tend to have a warmer tone than the made-up names. Some compound names suggest vivid logos, like the suggestive names, and some are a bit hard to spell or to remember.<br><br>VI. Emotional Names<br>Examples: I Can?t Believe It?s Not Butter, Save the Children, Named At Last<br><br>Here you highlight a particular feeling, such as astonishment, compassion or relief, which tends to lend the name a lighthearted tone. Make sure that if there?s some sort of implied promise in the name, that?s a promise your company delivers on.<br><br>Since the vast majority of company and product names fall into one of the above categories, you?ve made great progress when you?ve identified which matches your personal preferences most and is best for your particular naming challenge.<br><br>Happy naming!


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