Samples & Templates Of Branding Naming Copies

Samples & Templates Of Branding Naming Copies

How to choose a product name or pick your brand name using our frameworks, study templates, spreadsheets & scripts

Luke Freeman

Data Driven Decisions

Baby Name MemeNaming is difficult. For most brands, products, organisations, programs, and even children – people will agonise over a suitable name for quite a while. We've probably all had that experience where we feel like we've finally found the perfect name and then fall into a pit of sorrow when we realise it has a fatal flaw and we're back to the drawing board.

That time, effort, and often agony isn't misplaced:

"When you name something, it anchors it in people's minds. The name and the thing are then forever connected. It creates brand recognition."
– Brandwatch

Sometimes people are lucky, sometimes a name is sitting there ready for the taking, sometimes people have names before they even have a product. But for most of us branding often costs… and it can cost a lot – whether it be time, mental space or the money it costs to get an agency involved (Exxon spent $100 million for their brand name).

We've recently been through the process of naming our own product as well as helped other products through the process too. In this post we'll share what we've learned and the steps that have worked for us.

As it turns out, the process is not all that dissimilar to panning for gold…

The (Gold Panning) Naming Process:

  • Step 1. Pick your territory
  • Step 2. Fill the pan
  • Step 3. Stir the pan
  • Step 4. Sift the pan
  • Step 5. Score the nuggets
  • Step 6. Pick your winner

The Iterative Research Process

This article has a lot of references to Positly for participant recruitment, Google Sheets for analysing results and GuidedTrack for building activities. They are all easy to use and incredibly useful so if you haven't yet signed up for these services I recommend you do so now so you can follow along, look at the examples and templates.

Iterative Research Process

Iterative Research Process

Throughout the course of this article you'll follow the iterative research process of designing your research, building your studies (we recommend using Guided Track), delivering the study to participants (we recommend you use Positly) and analysing results (we recommend Google Sheets for this study).

Each time you go through the cycle you'll narrow in on the right answer to your research question – in the case of this article, it's what name is right for you!


Step 1. Pick your territory

When you're panning for gold or picking names, you need to have a good lay of the land, you need to know what you're looking for.

The first step in the process is deciding on what attributes you care about and what territory you'll explore.

Every brand has different needs when it comes to the name. Also, founders and staff generally have different preferences. Before getting started I encourage you to articulate the attributes you want in the name.

These attributes could be very specific such as "it must include the word 'blockchain' so we can get 10x investment!" or they could be more general such as "needs to be available as .com".

You will use these later to limit the search space and to score each name.

Here are the attributes we chose when we were searching for our name:

  • Available (or inexpensive) as .com (and most social media)
  • Trademarkable (not too descriptive, not taken already in the industry)
  • Distinct (not similar to other brands)
  • Meaningful (have at least some relevant meaning)
  • Memorable (not easily substituted for analogous abstract concepts e.g. General Motors could be mistaken for Common Engines)
  • Scalable (allow us to expand into different product lines, markets or geographies)
  • Short (easy to brand, easy type, few syllables, easy to fit on materials)
  • Positive affect (reminds people of nice things, not bad things)
  • Good for SEO (doesn't use competitive terms, no negative history)
  • Easy to pronounce (not easily mistaken)

Brand Name Criteria

Brand Name Criteria

In Chiranjeev Kohli's 1997 paper on brand considerations he outlined the criteria on which industry professionals typically test for in brand names:

There are many affective attributes that are important such as how much they like the name, enjoy saying it, find it memorable or distinct. There are many things written on name attributes but the two resources I recommend are the Chiranjeev Kohli study in the above table and the Golden Rules from Brandwatch.

Here's some of the affective attributes we commonly recommend scoring on:

  • likeable
  • positive
  • easy to remember
  • easy to say
  • meaningful
  • distinct or unique
  • free from negative connotations
  • relevant to the product category
  • relevant to the product description

The Territory

Once you know what you're looking for, you'll need to know where to find it!

For exploring the territory I recommend Nick Kolenda's framework* of name types.

Types of Brand Names (Nick Kolenda)

Types of Brand Names (Nick Kolenda)

According to his framework, names typically fall into one of the following categories:

  • Descriptive (relevant words)
    • e.g. General Motors, Electronic Arts, Sydney Theatre Company
  • Associative (relevant non-words)
    • e.g. Facebook, YouTube, Microsoft
  • Deviant (irrelevant words)
    • e.g. Apple, Amazon, Pandora
  • Neologistic (irrelevant non-words)
    • e.g. Exxon, Spotify, Kodak

Like many companies we initially started off with descriptive names, in fact we went through two descriptive names ("Participant Recruiter" and "Task Recruiter") while the product was an internal tool and in an early beta.

We found that these are (a) probably the most problematic names (unavailable, hard to trademark, surprisingly hard to remember) and (b) the names people suggested and instinctively preferred more often (when you're an unknown quantity).

Our early names had already caused us trouble so we finally bit the bullet to try again, we naturally started by looking into descriptive names again. After finding that so many of them were already taken or very unsuitable we discovered this article and from that point on we were fairly sure that if we kept going down that avenue they wouldn't tick enough boxes for us, especially after this suggestion:

"In the end, any type of name can work. One type isn't better than another. You simply need to weigh the importance of each factor. However, I do have one universal suggestion. You should always avoid the extreme top-right of the scatterplot [very descriptive words]."

After realising that descriptive names were probably out of the question we started exploring our other options.

We moved onto neologistic names (like Exxon) for a while and discovered that they can be difficult to come up with and they would take a lot of effort to get into people's memory and so many of the short and pronounceable ones were already taken. The internet ran out of 4 letter .com domains in 2013 and most pronounceable 5 letter ones are already gone too!

Then we looked at deviant names (like Apple). These are great because they are words that people are already familiar with and they may often be trademarkable within your industry. However, after we searched roughly 20,000 thousand English words for dot com availability we found that few of them are available for the type of money an early stage business would be willing to spend.

So that left us with associative names (like Microsoft). We decided to focus our search space on associative names because we felt they ticked the most boxes for us.

Step 2. Fill the pan

Once we knew what we were looking for we needed to generate a bunch of relevant words that related to the brand, these would become the building blocks for new names. We took a few approaches that ranged from brainstorming them ourselves, asking people on social media and running studies on our own platform (that is what we do after all!).

We built a simple Guided Track program so that people could be given a description of the product and then asked to generate as many relevant nouns as they could followed by as many benefits as they could. We also ask them to include associative words such as "cheetah" or "falcon" for "fast" as these can also be helpful later when naming.

Before asking participants about what words came to mind I recommend properly describing the product, a product description page like this one can be worth including prior to the main activity.

Here's the Product Word Generation templates we have built based on the studies we've conducted – they're yours to customise for your own studies, completely free:

  • Template Program: demo, customise
  • Example Program: preview, copy
  • Analysis Spreadsheet: preview, copy

Product Brand Word Generation Code

Product Word Generation Code

Have a look at the code of my example program (above). You can see that all I have done to customise it is to set the attributes for my product and added in some extra programs that I wanted (e.g. a Transparent Screener program and the Product Description program).

It's really that simple! It takes only a few minutes to get started. I've even built a customisation program that you can use to get started.

Once you've customised the program you can start getting data from participants by firing up Positly, creating a new run and pasting a link to the program as your activity link. You'll have data coming in within minutes.

Step 3. Stir the pan

Once you have your base words you can try mixing them up to create potential names.

In the case of associative names this is done by blending them, adding prefixes, adding suffixes, removing letters, replacing letters, creating homophones, translating them to other languages and any relevant technique.

Check out this example from Nick Kolenda's blog (the example is a calculator):

Associative Names

Associative Names

We have built some Google Sheet tools for you so that you can plug in your own words and start generating brand names!

  • Word Matrix Matrices (for prefix, suffix and blends)
  • Word Translations (for trying other languages)

I also recommend using these two websites to merge and combine words:

  • Mergewords
  • Word Unscrambler's Word Combiner

After this step it is quite likely you'll have thousands (if you want that many!) of names and a reasonable percentage of these may be little nuggets of gold. The next step will be to sift the pan for those nuggets.

Product Word Matrix Product Word Suffix Matrix Word Translation Spreadsheet

Step 4. Sift the pan

Now that your pan is full of a whole lot of dirt with hidden nuggets you'll need to sift through it to find those nuggets, once you've sifted them out you can put to the test.

I recommend just scrolling through them all quickly and marking any ones that grab your eye and putting them all into a list. Try to pick only ones with decent potential as the next step will work best with fewer than 200 names, ideally less than 50 (there's really no limit to how many names you could start with – it'd just take a lot of rounds of naming with participants).

Once you have your big list I recommend doing a Batch Pick study (see templates below) in which the names are broken into batches and the participants can pick their favourite from each batch. If you have a very large list you may want to have larger batches and enable a checkbox instead of a single select (simply set the parameter multi to anything).

Before going straight in and asking users about names, you may want to prime them to think about good names and perhaps set up a scenario first.

You can use these Naming Batch Pick templates to build your own studies and analysis:

  • Template Program: demo, customise
  • Example Program: preview, copy
  • Analysis Spreadsheet: preview, copy

Batch Pick Naming Analysis Batch Pick Naming Code

As you can see in the example program, all I have done to customise it is to set the attributes for my product and added in some extra programs that I wanted such (e.g. the Naming Scenario program).

If you want help customising your program, try the customisation program or feel free to get in touch.

Step 5. Score the nuggets

At this stage I'd recommend using our scorecard template (preview, copy) and taking the following steps:

  1. Remove names that are too similar (lest they split the vote)
  2. Check the domain name availability (.com and other relevant ones)
  3. Check the trademark availability (in your industry and in general)
  4. Give every name a score of your own on each attribute

Brand Naming Scorecard

These steps should help narrow it down to your top 5 or so names.

You're on the home stretch, you have a few names that seem reasonably good but you really need to look at how they make people feel and how well the perform on the attributes that are important to you.

We normally use a Likert Scale to test how strongly a participant agrees or disagrees with the statement in the format "brand is attribute" ( e.g. "General Motors is easy to remember").

For this part of the process each name will be scored on each attribute. Because the total number of attributes will be asked for each brand name it means that the number of questions will grow significantly if you have more brands or attributes. Therefore, at this point in the process you want to have at most 5-6 names and 5-6 attributes to prevent the number of questions blowing out.

You can use these Naming Attributes Scoring templates to build your own studies and analysis:

  • Template Program: demo, customise
  • Example Program: preview, copy
  • Analysis Template: preview, copy

Naming Attributes Scoring Analysis Naming Attributes Scoring Template

To customise the program, all that's needed it is to set the attributes for my product and as you can see in the example program.

In this example I also opted to add in some extra programs that I wanted such as a Name Priming program and another one that asked about the Name Connotations.

If you want help customising your program, try the customisation program or feel free to get in touch.

Step 6. Pick your winner

By now you may have a clear winner… if you do, then this GIF is in order:

Winning Animated GIF: Fireworks, Cheers with Leonardo DiCaprio

Unfortunately, in many cases you'll be stuck with a near tie between 2 or 3.

To break the tie you'll need to be clear on where the ambiguity is coming from. I suggest sitting down with your team and talking about this, you may need to apply a weighting to some of your attributes (e.g. "distinctiveness" may be twice as important as "easy to say") or run some of the studies again with fewer names (the higher performing ones).

For us, we had a very close tie that was only finally broken by doing a straight head to head comparison between two names with 400 participants until we reached statistical significance.

The Batch Pick naming program can easily be customised and combined with other programs to help decide on the final two or three names. In this example program all I do is set the batches to 1 and the batch_size to 2 and "viola!" we have a study that we can implement to break that tie.

Yay! Now what?

Congratulations! You've survived a difficult and often heart-wrenching process that's full of ambiguity and covers both squishy human feelings and hard analytical approaches. At the end of this process you should have a name that you can feel much more confident about.

The next step will be to develop your brand and pricing models. Just like naming, you can be a little bit more scientific about them both than simple guesswork. You can look to best practices and then run your own studies every step of the process.

If you would like help with your naming studies, please don't hesitate to get in touch.

If you have any questions, suggestions, feedback or experiences to share, please join in on the comments below. Feel free to subscribe to get notified of future updates to this blog.


Want some further reading? I recommend these three articles that were referenced earlier in this post: How to Name a Product: A Step-By-Step Walkthrough,  Creating effective brand names: A study of the naming process and How to Name a Product: 5 Golden Rules we Follow.

writen by:

Luke Freeman

Luke is the CEO of Positly, which aims to dramatically improve the speed, quality and affordability of social science, product, and human subject research.

Samples & Templates Of Branding Naming Copies

Source: https://www.positly.com/choose-brand-product-name-using-naming-studies/

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