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    Brand Naming --- Art, Skill, and Luck!
    Copyright © 2005, Karen Post

    A great name is like extra octane in a brand. A bad, boring or 
    sound-alike name won't necessarily kill a brands chances for 
    success. In most cases however, it dramatically dilutes the brand 
    equity and potency.
    
    
    Do You Have A Name That Basically Sucks?
    
    If so, shame on you. If you acquired it, I send my sympathy.
    
    Should you change it? Yes. It will cost some bucks, but it's also 
    a great opportunity to get a lot of great attention and renewed 
    momentum. Weigh it out, look at the cost versus the benefit and 
    remember that change can be scary, but a lame brand can be 
    scarier!
    
    
    Birthing A Brand Name
    
    The task of developing that killer name has become quite complex. 
    For years, business owners and management named their offspring, 
    then creative service firms and ad agencies jumped in, often with 
    a sprinkling of college talent, finally, the general public added 
    their wisdom in naming contests. I'm sure all have produced their 
    share of  brilliant names as well as some very scary ones. Now 
    this field of art, science, skill, and luck has gone 
    professional. Naming brands is big business and can come with a 
    big price tag. Hire a professional naming company and expect a 
    bill of $10,000-$100,000 or more before the graphic execution or 
    production. 
    
    
    So What Is A Great Name Worth? 
    
    The answer: a lot. If your brand is properly nourished, it grows 
    and has a long shelf life or history - do the math.
    
    
    Not All Great Brand Names Cost A Lot 
    
    Nike™ is one of the best examples. Nike is Greek for victory and 
    is also the Greek goddess of victory. The name came in a dream to 
    Jeff Johnson, Nike's first "real" employee, and replaced the 
    original name of Blue Ribbon Sports. It beat out Phil Knight's 
    own name change idea of "Dimension 6." However, the company did 
    pay Carolyn Davidson, a graphic design student at Portland State 
    University, $35 in 1971 to design the trademark "swoosh."  
    
    When faced with the challenge of naming, start with your ideas 
    and those of your staff. No matter what, even if the names you 
    come up with stink, it's a good creative exercise about defining 
    your brand essence. If you have the budget, outside input and 
    other naming solutions can also be a valid investment. Remember 
    that the life and benefit of your brand name may last for years.
    
    It will be plastered on lots of things including your market's 
    mind. Whatever you spend, divide it by the projected years of use 
    and value. This same formula applies for investments in corporate 
    identities and tagline. They are as valuable as a great employee 
    or, piece of manufacturing equipment.
    
    Whether you decide to outsource or to create on your own name, I 
    suggest walking through the following preliminary exercise. 
    
    
    Ask Yourself The Following:
    
    Who will ultimately decide the name? One person or a team? 
    Whoever that is should be involved in the criteria-building 
    process. What kind of brand are you naming? Company, consumer 
    product, business service, or event? What is the expected life of 
    the brand name? Does the name fit into a larger family of names? 
    Will it be used only in the U.S. or will it go global? Remember 
    that today "global" can mean the Internet too. Who is your 
    primary audience for the brand names? Are you creating a new 
    category or joining an existing one? If joining a category, what 
    are your competitors' names? What are the primary strategies for 
    building your brand?
    
    Once you've completed your basic criteria or framework, you can 
    proceed with the grueling task of a name dump of endless 
    possibilities. 
    
    
    Should A Name Be Literal And Descriptive Or Obscure And 
    Emotional?  
    
    My tendency tilts toward obscure and certainly emotional, 
    primarily because I'm a strong proponent of distinctive brands. 
    However, I also believe each case is unique and sometimes brand 
    names get passed down and changing them would take an act of 
    Congress. 
    
    
    An Obscure Or Unfamiliar Word Can Be A Brand Home Run
    
    Consider Apple™, Nike™, Google™, FUBU™, and Yahoo™. They all have 
    visibility/frequency, brand-story telling communication, and 
    brand performance. They are all hugely successful brands but, 
    started as small companies.
    
    Although not my favorite, literal and descriptive words can work 
    in some brand naming situations. Generally, though proceed with 
    caution because they can be more easily copied or imitated, 
    leading to buyer confusion. Such confusion usually defeats the 
    purpose of a sound brand. 
    
    If you have a big branding budget, you can salvage or sustain a 
    boring, generic, or literal brand name with some other compelling 
    messaging. Take, for example, Southwest Airlines. Their 
    consistently creative and "on brand" advertising has transformed 
    a somewhat nonexciting name into a great brand name. However, 
    most companies don't have the luxury of Southwest's media budget 
    or have not engaged a great ad agency like GSDM in Austin, Texas.
    
    With that said, unless you have a big, endless budget, I say... 
    Avoid like the plague:
    
    
    Dumb Generic Names
    
    Dumb generic names like Computer Solutions, Performance Printing 
    or Innovative Technologies. I'm sorry if I've offended anyone, 
    but these names will just make you spend more and work harder at 
    building a brand. They don't have legs and will likely drown in 
    the sea of sameness. Avoiding generics names is also critical in 
    consumer-packaged products, especially when private label 
    copycats by mass retailers are showing up. Many times the 
    name can be the strong point of difference.
    
    
    Copycat Names
    
    I also think copycat names or those that sound like a competitor 
    or some other big brand are not worthy of much.
    
    
    Names That Are Hard To Spell Or Pronounce 
    
    Finally a name should be something most people can spell and 
    certainly pronounce.
    
    Whatever route you take, be it working with a naming company, a 
    creative consultant, rallying your troops and making it an 
    internal company project, enlisting strangers in a naming 
    contest, or combining several of these methods, you have created 
    an extensive list of possible contenders. Now what?
    
    
    More Big Naming Questions
    
    How will the market receive the name? With supporting context, 
    will the market get it? 
    
    Will it jive with your strategic positioning of the brand? Are 
    there negative connotations or associations with the name? Is it 
    available to use? On the earth? On the Web? 
    
    Once you've boiled down the list of prospects, you can organize 
    nonscientific opinion polls (i.e., in shopping malls, bars, 
    office gatherings). You can also conduct focus groups to test 
    reactions further or you can do a pricey quantifiable study to 
    gauge understanding acceptance, likability, or associations with 
    your name prospect.
    
    Is there a magic, fool-proof method for testing names? No. In 
    fact, sometimes too much analysis just delays decisions and 
    defeats the whole mission of naming your brand before the next 
    decade. I recommend that you test a little, listen a little to 
    people you respect, listen to your gut feelings, and proceed with 
    a choice.
    
    
    Great Brand Names
    
    1) Are emotional
    2) Stick in the brain
    3) Have personalities
    4) Have depth
    
    
    While The Brand Name Is Very Important, A Brand Cannot Survive On 
    Name Alone
    
    The brand name and how the brand is executed are equally vital 
    for a successful and sustained brand life. A great brand name can 
    serve as the anchor to your cause, a symbol to your story, a 
    point of difference in your marketplace, a memory trigger, or 
    just one important part of your branding arsenal. Go get you a 
    great one! 
    



    Writer's Resource Box:
    Karen Post, The Branding Diva™ is a national speaker, author, 
    and branding expert.  For more than 23 years, she has worked with 
    Fortune 500 organizations and emerging small businesses in both 
    consumer and business-to-business sectors to grow their 
    businesses with a landed brand.
    
    Karen is the monthly branding columnist for Fastcompany.com., she 
    has been featured extensively in national business media outlets; 
    and her writing is published internationally. Karen newest book 
    "Brain Tattoos, Creating unique brands that stick to your 
    customers" minds (AMACOM). To contact Karen visit her Web site 
    at: http://www.brandingdiva.com.




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