Ever heard, “Did you google today?” or, “Go try googling, and you will find it?” Watch out for this sort of lingo. To most people, it may sound like free advertising for Google, but in reality, it could be a nightmare for the corporation. When a company’s name brand lends itself to “verbing” — such as xeroxing, fedexing or rollerblading — a code-red alert strikes the boardroom. Legal SWAT teams swing into action to protect their successful global brand, and an aggressive policing of corporate name usage kicks in.
Of course, everyday use of a corporate name is somewhat of a happy problem because it likely means the company has acquired significant profits, recognition, and success. However, legal teams’ powers are limited. If a company name becomes a verb or a popular dictionary word, it enters the public domain, and the company loses its intellectual property rights — witness Kleenex, Fridge, and Hoover, to name just a few. Then, there are only a few things the company can do.
For example, lawyers can issue fancy memos designed to force people and media to always refer to a brand name as a registered trademark of the company. They also can ask advertising and branding agencies to avoid making creative uses and plays on the corporate name when it is used in commercials or general promotional copies of ads. However, this is a long and painful process.
Dodging the Problem
Fortunately, studies have shown that certain alpha-structures do not easily lend themselves to verbing. Despite their fame and popularity in daily language, these types of names survive over time and remain powerful corporate brands while enjoying a proprietary status. Some examples are Yahoo, Apple, Netscape, Telus, Microsoft, Sony, Rolex, and Nintendo. Have you ever heard, “I Rolexed and realized I was late?” or, “Leave me alone, I’m Appling”? How about, “I just Nintendozed off,” or, “I was depressed and very Microsoftish”? Kindly let me know if you ever come across such “google de gook.”
As a result, finding great brand names has become a very scientific process and is no longer a creative exercise. Under the proper Laws of Naming, all issues are explored in advance so that a brand name will be engineered for durability. The days of accidental naming are over.
Google has a big battle ahead of it, and the fights will take place on two fronts. Firstly, the company still has the best search engine to date and as a result acquired too much global attention too quickly. Secondly, as a borrowed word from the mathematical section of the English dictionary, the word “google” does have an alpha-structure that easily lends itself to cute verbalization. Right now, Sir Isaac Newton is simply googlified.
Change Now or Later
Although it may be too late for Google to change its name, other startups can certainly learn from the search company’s name struggles. Here are seven pitfalls to avoid when considering a new name.
1. The name is similar or identical to thousands of others.
When a corporate name is heavily diluted and shared by hundreds or thousands of others in all kinds of businesses, it simply gets lost in the crowd. Also, when a name is a borrowed word from a dictionary, making it a part of everyday lingo, it never achieves any distinction. Despite extraordinary spending on advertising and promotion, it may simply die from exhaustion. Open any old business magazine, and it will unfold like a cemetery of dead corporate names.
2. The name is too old to convey today’s dynamics.
Sometimes, a name crawls out of history, reflecting the great human toil of the founding fathers, but is somehow not suitable for present-day, technology-savvy culture.
3. The spelling of the name requires a relatively high IQ.
A large majority of corporate names are spelled creatively to fit a logo or avoid a serious trademark problem. In such situations, both common sense and the science of corporate nomenclature are abused. Twisted spelling ensures obscurity. The human mind continually rejects the corruption of a familiar word and refuses to remember specific alpha structures. After all, if a name can be spelled in four different ways, the company will only end up with 25 percent of Web site hits and profits.
4. Money must be spent to explain the origin of the name.
If a name does not simply relate to the business and requires a constant explanation of its obscure, yet cute, origin, it becomes standard practice for advertising agencies to educate the universe about this dysfunctionality. The poor consumer simply suffers. Corporations and ad agencies thrive on receiving awards for their creative advertising gimmicks, while customers simply shut off.
5. The corporation does not own a trademark on its name or have an identical dot-com domain.
When a corporation does not legally own a corporate name, what’s the point of the exercise? Why bother at all? Today, a large majority of corporate names are not trademarkable globally, and most do not have an identical dot-com domain.
6. The name is embarrassing in certain countries.
Globalization is a fact of life. A name must work like a marketing weapon not only in its own country but also around the globe. There should be no need to hide under the desk because the name is embarrassing or profane in a foreign language. However, a large majority of names today do not work efficiently on the international scene; in fact, they cause ongoing stress when it comes to gaining worldwide recognition.
7. The name is too long, difficult, confusing, complicated, or boring.
When a name is too long, it often gets initialized. This unwanted process changes the entire meaning of the name and can result in it being listed in strange categories. Meanwhile, when a name is too difficult, confusing or boring, it becomes a different animal to different people. Strange name combinations, often due to M&A, end up telling more than one story and cause confusion in the marketplace. Odd terminologies or alphanumeric structures in a name, such as using upper- or lower-case letters in nontraditional places or including dashes, slashes, and other dingbat characters, will only ensure the name’s self-destruction.
Myths, Facts and Rules
“We are out of names” is only a myth successfully established by advertising and logo shops, leaving clients with strange and often silly names. Contrary to popular belief, there is no shortage of unique, powerful, one-of-a-kind, trademarkable, corporate names. What is in short supply are successful, proven methodologies and highly reputable professionals with successful track records.
Indeed, a company would be wise to ask its ad agency if it can produce such a professional with a track record; otherwise, the agency will only be picking names out of a hat. Naming is a serious black-and-white exercise, and it should never be confused with color, design, logos, and branding campaigns, which only become important after a name has been selected.
great article, but also didn’t Yahoo have a slogan "Do you Yahoo?" or something like that? i AM out of the country now and not paying attention, but i do seem to remember that, and it seems an example of the idea that perhaps the boardrooms want the verbing to happen just a little bit, but not cross that dangerous line…