Product Naming Tips
Be Careful How You Name Your Next Product
Embed:
Product naming is a key aspect of branding. The name you ultimately choose will reflect who you are, your company's personality and vision. But more importantly, it must unforgettably embody the promise of your product's main benefit to your potential customers. It can dovetail generically with your competition, but ideally, it should stand out from the crowd. Where to begin? Here are some basic guidelines.If the field's too crowded, be unique
MSN Search, Netscape Search, AOL Search, they all stayed in the same category, so you could play it safe and go with Stupendous Search or Super-Duper Search. This works for a time, but as soon as the field gets too crowded, you'll be lost in the mush of sameness with ever diminishing name recognition. If you're in it for the long haul, better to break away from the crowd with a name like Google, Yahoo, or even Dogpile (though I'm not a fan of going into the scat category just to be unique). Even Kinkos, the founder's nickname (he had kinky red hair in school) is different enough to be memorable.
Avoid tongue twisters
There's a little part in all of us that hates to be embarrassed. When we ask for a product or talk about it with friends, we want to sound literate and not fumble over pronunciations. So be kind to your potential customers and avoid tongue twisters, or any name that's unusually long or foreign sounding. If you can't find a single-word name, don't go over two or three syllables.
Alliteration can help with longer names
Okay, so the president of the company likes all the longer names on your list. You can make them more memorable and/or easier to pronounce by using alliteration. Consider Circuit City (originally, the incredibly bland, monosyllabic, Wards). Or Downtown Disney, Or the most famous brand in the world, Coca Cola. All four syllables, yet they roll off the tongue with surprising ease.
Avoid abbreviations

You may also like...
- Health Product Comparisons of the Best L...
- Product Review: Listerine's Agent Cool B...
- Product Review:Listerine Agent Cool Blue...
- Product Review: Origins Spot Remover
- Colon Cleansing Product Review: Clean N'...
- Ten Reasons Why You Should Not Buy Jonat...
- HeadOn: Most Irritating New Product
- 10 Tips on Choosing a Product or Service...
- Product Recall Information
- Product Review: Mary Kay Targeted Line R...
Takeaways
- Avoid tongue twisters, or any name that's unusually long or foreign sounding.
- Abbreviations lack personality and communicate very little.
- Try for a name that conveys a benefit or describes content.
Did You Know?
Fiat found they had to rename their "uno" in Finland, since "Uno" means garbage in Finnish.Comments
Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Today's Most Commented On
Advertisment
