Tips for Evocative, Distinctive Company Names
by Marcia Yudkin
Published on this site: July 30th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month

As the sponsor of a Name-This-Company Contest (www.yudkin.com/namecontest.htm),
I've been watching suggestions come in by the dozens every
day. Unfortunately, the great majority of names submitted
so far do not pass "go." A good company name is
not only catchy and evocative, but also pronounceable, spellable
and not likely to backfire because of unsavory associations.
Since the contest offers prize of $100 for the best business
name submitted, along with the chance to become a professional
"namer," getting paid to think up new product names,
new company names, tag lines and ad slogans, I would guess
that the same flaws occur when company owners or managers
sit down to think up a new name for their own business.
So here's a quick quiz to sensitize you to important factors
in potential company names. To which of the following names
would you give a thumbs up and which a
thumbs down - and why?
- Zyklon Bikes
- Quirinus Quarterly (political magazine)
- The Energy Spot (web site selling healthy snacks and
diet plans)
- Elkins Enterprises (mail order company)
Answers: All the above names deserve thumbs down. Here's
why.
- "Zyklon" sounds fast and energetic. However,
it's also the name of the gas used by Nazis to kill millions
during World War Two. A British company that announced this
name for running shoes earned terrible PR.
- Quirinus was a Roman god of military and political affairs,
so the meaning of this name fits. But even most Ph.D.s and
history buffs would not be able to spell or pronounce the
name with confidence.
- Start the name of an ecommerce company with "the"
and customers won't easily remember whether or not "the"
is part of the domain name. "The" followed by
the letter "e" is even more problematic for spelling
a web address. People will hesitate to type "theenergyspot.com."
- Like "Quirinus Quarterly," "Elkins Enterprises"
has alliteration in its favor. But so many dubiously honest
and struggling but honest businesses have used "Enterprises"
that it sounds suspicious to many people as a business name
component.
If you're reading this before August 31, 2005, you may still
enter our first name-this-company contest with as many company
name candidates as you like at
www.yudkin.com/namecontest.htm
. The winner of the company name contest will be announced
September 5, 2005. Non-winners who submit captivating names
will be considered for a post as a professional namer, as
will the contest
winner.
After the expiration of this contest, you'll find another
contest running at www.yudkin.com/namecontest.htm
, for a tag line, with a product naming contest after that
and probably yet another kind of naming contest after that.
Happy naming!

Marcia Yudkin is the author of 6 Steps to Free Publicity
and ten other books hailed for outstanding creativity. Find
out more about her work at www.yudkin.com/marketing.htm

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