Friday, June 10, 2011

The 10 Commandments of a Great Business Name


Like an individual's given name, a business name is an identity. Naming your business is one of the toughest parts of starting a business mainly because you'll be known under this name from the start until you, hopefully not, end your business. Your business will have to live, figuratively speaking, under this given name. A business is like a new born child. You have to give it a name. When you give it a name that doesn't exactly fit your business, it would be just like naming a kid with a wrong name too. A business name doesn't exactly make up for serious deficiency in your business operations or help you avoid selling. But a business name is everything and nothing. Getting the right business name will help distinguish you from a sea of bland competitors, provide your customers with a reason to hire you, and aid in the branding of your company. Apply these 10 commandments when choosing a name for your business.

1. Take Naming Seriously

Naming your business or products is a serious matter. The name you choose can play an integral part in the marketing of your company. Your name projects your image, brand and position in the marketplace.

2. Avoid Word Play Dangers

Taking the word play strategy will add to the difficulty in having customers remember and find you. Being cute can backfire. Funnynames.com lists the following actual “businesses to avoid:”

Ear-Resistible Designs Plus

Dirty Ernies Paragon Hotel

Fireball Oven Co

Mess Graphics Inc

Ralph Rotten's Nut Pound

X-Ray Sweaters

3. Don't be an IBM

While it might be tempting to abbreviate your business name to make communications and correspondence easier, as a small business owner, you don't have the resources and marketing muscle to educate your market on what you acronym means.

4. Be Focused

Forget tagging your business name with the moniker such as global or enterprise. Any start-up founder has big visions for their company. You might one day envision marketing to diverse markets and having a wide range of products. Successful start-ups have limited time and money; it's more likely your success in the world of commerce will come from being highly focused in one narrow area. A small company is a specialist; it's why your customer wants you.

5. Stay Out of Court

Never ever use, borrow, or modify an existing famous brand name. In Elizabethtown, Kentucky, Victor Moselet used the name Victor's Secret when he opened his adult gift and lingerie shop. Victor's Secret did not remain secret when the legal department of Victoria's Secret sent a letter to Moselet claiming trademark infringement. In haste, the name was changed to Victor's Little Secret, but the change was not enough for Victoria's Secret who then filed a lawsuit.

6. Think Beyond Local

The bulk of small businesses operate in local markets. This doesn't mean your name should be geographically based. If you are marketing to customers in a local market, they'll know you operate locally. Adding your town name to your business name just ensures you will be stick in a long directory list of other local companies with similar names. If you want a local name, add it to your marketing such as “Exclusively Serving the (town) Area.”

7. Avoid ME Inc

It's a common tendency for a business to be named after the original founder. If you are planning to one day sell your company, a company owner named business is less attractive to a perspective buyer's than a brand built on a company.

8. Ask Others to Spell it

A unique business name may be an advantage since people will easily recognize it. But a too unique business name may drive some people crazy when trying to spell it. The world could be spelled with site or sight. Put your business name through the spelling test and ask others to spell it. Yourdictionary.com lists experience, intelligence, jewelry, millennium, and personnel as a few of the top 100 most misspelled words.

9. Be Web Friendly

Consumers are bombarded with business names and advertising on a daily basis. Your job as a successful small business is to make customers remember you. Your website web address should be the same as your business name. Avoid the hyphenated web address names. It's hard enough to remember a web site address without the hyphens.

10. Check Availability

When you have developed a great business name, spend the time to determine if another business isn't using it. You can use a similar name for your business if another company uses it in an unrelated market or industry. Once you have your name, protect it by registering the business name with your country or State office.

Your business name should be easy to remember and memorable. Apply these 10 commandments when naming your business and in the end you'll avoid a marketing disaster.

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