Business
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What's In a Name? The Six
Essential Elements You Need to Know
By Susan A. Friedmann
Selecting a name for your new business is not
easy. A name does more than identify your company. It tells
customers who you are, what you do, and more than a little
about how you do it. Your name differentiates you from your
peers, peaks customer interest, and invites further investigation
-- if you do it right.
I didn’t do it right. At least, not at first.
All entrepreneurs make mistakes, and I made
one of my first ones right off the bat. Thrilled with the
fledgling business I was starting, this precious enterprise
so near and dear to my heart, I christened my company Diadem
Communications. Diadem means crown-- a fitting name for what
I felt was a crowning achievement.
What does Diadem say to you? Does it evoke thoughts
of me coming into your company, training your sales team to
be the best booth staff ever, ensuring that every single trade
show you attend turns out to be amazingly successful? Does
it make me sound so good that you just can’t wait to hire
me?
No. It doesn’t say that to me either. And even
worse, it didn’t say that to any of my potential customers.
Going by name alone, no one would be able to determine the
least bit of information about me, my company, or the services
we offer. The name said nothing, and it did nothing for me.
The name had to go. More importantly, it had
to be replaced by something effective. How do you come up
with an effective name? Consider these six elements:
An Effective Name:
1. Tells Who You Are: Your name should
reflect your identity. This is an essential aspect of branding.
You’ll be promoting this name, getting it in front of as many
eyes as possible as often as possible. How do you want the
public to think of you?
For some, that means integrating your personal
name into the name of your business. This is very common in
some professions: legal, medical, and accounting leap to mind.
Others prefer a more descriptive name. One successful
small baker runs her business under the name “The Cookie Lady”
because that’s how her first customers identified her. It’s
doubtful that most of the customers even know her first name
(It’s Pat) but everybody in her market knows “The Cookie Lady”.
2. Tells What You Do: It’s incredible
how many company names give little, if any indication of what
type of work the organization actually does. Take the following
examples:
- Smith and Sons
- Hulbert Brothers
- Only One
Can you tell me what
any of these companies does? Of course you can’t. They’re
relying on customers already knowing who they are (a tricky
proposition for new businesses!) or by having their name found
in ‘context’, such as a yellow pages or on-line business directory.
3. Tells How You
Do It: Words are very powerful. By carefully selecting
what words you use in your name, you can convey a great deal
about your company’s image. Consider the names of three different
massage and bodywork centers:
- Champlain Valley Therapeutic Massage
- Clouds Above Massage
- Speedy Spa
All three companies are providing the same service: massage
therapy. Yet the first appears to favor a more medical approach,
the second, a dreamy, luxury approach, and the third focuses
on fast service.
4. Differentiates You From Your Peers: Your company
name is the first opportunity to tell customers how you differ
from the competition. This can be done by emphasizing what
makes you unique, pinpointing what aspect of your products
and services can’t be found anywhere else -- or that you do
better than anyone else.
Consider the massage
therapy example we looked at in number three.Each organization
clearly has a different focus and approach to their customer
base. They’re attracting different types of clients, who are
seeking fundamentally different approaches. All of which is
conveyed in less than five words.
5. Peaks Customer
Interest: Creating customer interest is an art and a science.
Think carefully about your target audience. What qualities
of your services are of the greatest import to your customers?
What kind of words are likely to appeal to them?
Emphasize the important
qualities in your name. For example, busy homeowners are drawn
to the inherent promise of speed offered by “Bob’s Instant
Plumbing” while a reader in search of a good mystery will
gravitate toward “Crime Pays Books”.
Word choice is also
important. Two yarn shops can both specialize in specialty
fibers, but the one who labels themselves “All Hemp All the
Time” will draw in a decidedly different crowd than the one
named “Natural Beauty: Organic Yarns”.
6. Invites Further
Investigation: Customers are funny creatures. What one
group finds to be funny and engaging turns another group off.
You want your name to be inviting and approachable -- as those
qualities are perceived by your target audience.
The best example
of this may be seen in the individual investor segment of
the financial services industry. Charles Schwab has spent
years cultivating a classic, formal image -- but now that
the consumer base is changing from ‘old people with money’
to ‘everyone with a 401K’, Charles Schwab has launched the
“Talk to Chuck” campaign in an effort to be more approachable.
Make sure your name
doesn’t intimidate customers away! Some industries are more
formal than others, but adopt pretension at your peril.
After following a
series of simple step-by-step instructions to match my corporate
identity with my service offering, I came up with the quintessential
name: The Trade Show Coach. This name instantly tells customers
what I do – assist companies with trade shows – and a little
of the manner in which I do it – coach, rather than dictate,
direct, guide, or organize.
See the difference?
So did the buying public, some of who quickly became my best
customers. The same thing can happen for you -- if you pick
the right name.
Susan A. Friedmann,
CSP, The Tradeshow Coach, Lake Placid, NY, author: “Meeting
& Event Planning for Dummies,” working with companies to improve
their meeting and event success through coaching, consulting
and tradeshow training. For a free copy of “10 Common Mistakes
Exhibitors Make”, e-mail: article4@thetradeshowcoach.com;
website: www.thetradeshowcoach.com
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