Name Your Marketing Thing with Zing

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"Hey, I have this "thing" I need to name. I need to call it something… sexy. Something exciting… you know, something catchy."

If this is you, whether it's a new business name, or a product, or an event or some promotional thing. My friend, you need to say it with zing.

There are lots of things in business that it makes sense to name. You can't just call it any old thing. You need a catchy phrase that gets stuck in your head. But how do you go about doing that… finding that catchy phrase or that perfect name for your 'thing'?

Here are some guiding principles to help (or download the full Naming Worksheet: Say it with Zing here).

 

Consider the 5 types of names

Naming strategies generally fall into one of five categories (or some combination of them). They are:

  1. Descriptive
  2. Suggestive
  3. Playful
  4. Arbitrary
  5. Wordplay or Acronym

 

You also need to be clear on the scope of your naming project. Ask yourself questions like:

  • What are you naming?
  • How long will it last in the marketplace?
  • What are the characteristics the name should communicate?
  • What is the personality or attitude you want to convey?
  • What other brand properties does it need to relate to?
  • How will it be used? What design considerations will inform the solution?

These answers comprise your design brief. Whether you're taking on this project yourself, or enlisting help, everyone needs a creative brief. It will focus your exploration and influence the decision you make in the end.

 

The creative process

Now you're ready for the fun part. This creative brainstorming process might look something like this.

Making Lists

  • Considering the brief, list adjectives that come to mind for this 'thing'
  • Now list action words or verbs to describe what this 'thing' has to offer
  • What other word associations come to mind? List them.


Playing around

Make columns or pages for each of the 5 naming strategy types: descriptive, suggestive, playful, arbitrary, wordplay. For each category, combine your words and phrases from your first three lists and create naming ideas that fit that concept. Don't judge your ideas. Write down anything, even if it sounds off. Be crazy. Think of opposites. Follow any word association that comes to mind. Write it down. Try to create quantity here, not quality. You can do this as a group or alone. You can assign the same exercise to several people and then compare lists, to arrive at new combinations. Remember, it takes a whole bunch of bad ideas to arrive at a really good idea. And your first handful of ideas are probably not very original and should be thrown out anyway. Keep going.

Go back to your creative brief. Look at your competitors. Look at market trends. Does this spark any new ideas? Add them to your ideas by category.


Review your work

OK. NOW you can put your judging cap on. Review all your ideas and eliminate any that simply won't work. Narrow your favorites down to 3-5 of your best options. Put those on a new list by themselves. Now STOP.


Think on it

It may sound crazy but the creative process is a little like that philosophy about never sending an email when you're angry. You draft it and get all your angst out on the page. Then you sleep on it. You give it some distance; let it settle. When you come back to that email you likely have a whole new perspective on the matter and you might choose to revise the message and send it, or to not send it at all.

I'm not saying you may decide to scrap your whole naming project, but I wholeheartedly believe in the creative subconscious, and the power of a fresh perspective. Come back the next day or next week and review your ideas again.

Don't forget the value of input and feedback from others. (Just be careful they fit the demographic you are targeting as that can sometimes throw you in a wrong direction if your target is very specific.) If others have performed the brainstorm, add all their favorites to one list and review them together.

You may repeat steps 1-3 in various forms as many times as you like, depending on the project or you may move on to step 5.


Choose & go

Now it's time to choose. Review the creative brief again to refresh your mind about the focus of your project. Now, which of the favorites best hits the mark? Are there tweaks you can make to them? Are there new ideas you didn't think of before? Are you done or do you still have work to do? Only you will know at this point. You can revisit your entire list and work through the exercise some more, continue to get input and ideas from others or reach a conclusion and move on.

That's it. You've taken the creative naming strategy journey and hopefully you have a new name for your 'thing.' Congratulations. You've successfully added some zing to your thing.

Download the full Naming Strategy Worksheet below.

Don't have time for DIY or just need some help? Fill out the contact form or give me a shout and let's chat. I would love to noodle on it for you.

NAMING WORKSHEET
By Barbara Bogue 22 Aug, 2023
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