Naming fundamentals
How to choose a memorable name
A good name is not just a clever word. It is a small identity system that people can hear, repeat, type, remember, and connect with a clear idea.
1. Start with the job of the name
Before judging any idea, define what the name needs to do. A gamertag may need speed and attitude. A business name may need trust and flexibility. A fantasy kingdom may need history and sound texture. A pet name may need warmth and daily usability.
2. Score clarity before cleverness
Clever names often feel exciting in the first minute and confusing in the second. A useful name should pass a simple test: can someone understand the sound, repeat it once, and spell it without a long explanation?
3. Listen for rhythm
Names with balanced syllables are easier to remember. Short names often work well for games and pets. Two-part names can work for creators and brands because they create a phrase-like rhythm: Bright Loop, North Forge, Pixel Journal.
4. Check flexibility
A narrow name can become a constraint. If your YouTube channel may expand beyond phone reviews, avoid a name that only works for phones. If your brand may add new products, avoid a name that locks you into one feature.
5. Build a shortlist, then wait
Generate many options, save the strongest five, and revisit them later. The best names usually survive a second look because they remain clear when the initial novelty fades.
Simple name scoring table
| Factor | Question | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Clarity | Can people read it quickly? | Reduces confusion and typing errors. |
| Sound | Does it feel natural aloud? | Improves recall and word of mouth. |
| Fit | Does it match the category? | Sets expectations for the audience. |
| Flexibility | Can it grow with the project? | Prevents rebranding too early. |
| Distinctiveness | Does it avoid obvious copies? | Helps the name stand apart. |