The naming and branding blog

Category / Tag: industry insider

What’s a soul worth these days? Ask Anthony Shore

Posted: July 23rd, 2007 by Steve | Filed under: industry insider| 10 Comments

Via PRNewswire:

Landor Associates, one of the world’s leading strategic branding and design consultancies, today announced the appointment of Anthony Shore to Global Director, Naming & Writing. Shore was previously Creative Director of Naming & Writing at the San Francisco office of Landor.

In 2006, Shore was charged with establishing and leading Landor’s first naming-oriented Global Knowledge Sharing Team to optimize processes and resources worldwide. This resulted in a significant increase in naming assignments and an advancement of Landor’s capabilities in this area.

Charlie Wrench, Chief Executive Officer of Landor, said, “Over the course of Anthony’s career with Landor, he has shown nothing more than absolute passion for his work and an increasing determination to transform Landor’s worldwide naming network into the most accomplished and catalytic group in our industry. I trust that in just a few years time, this goal will be reached and Landor will be recognized as the world’s leading naming network.

When asked about his goals moving forward, Shore said, “Developing great names for a global audience requires a deep understanding of many local languages and cultures. It also requires exceptional creativity and a strategic brand focus. My vision is to maximize the individual creativity and collective effectiveness of the two dozen brilliant namers Landor Associates has worldwide. With fantastic naming work, we provide a fantastic return for our clients.

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The Joy of Lex – more juicy details

Posted: May 31st, 2007 by Steve | Filed under: industry insider| No Comments

The Pulp.


There’s a new hotel name coming to the Chicago skyline

The corner of State and Lake will soon be home to Chicago’s newest luxury hotel, and it sports a very unusual name.

In other Igor naming news, our first national television network name launched last week- there are two more in the pipe so stay tuned.

Meanwhile, over on the seedy side of town, the good folks at Landor launched their corporate HQ webcam today, where it’s just another day at the orifice. Enjoy:

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Because they’ve run out of “Most Extreme Centipede” ideas

Posted: April 6th, 2007 by Steve | Filed under: Igor, industry insider| No Comments

Discovery Channel to air “The Joy of Lex” in July.

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Obfuscating and Circuitous Process Diagrams

Posted: February 21st, 2007 by Steve | Filed under: industry insider| No Comments

In our continuing series of Obfuscating and Circuitous Process Diagrams, we give you the U.S Department of Defense’s own “Verification, Validation, and Authentication problem solving process”. If this doesn’t scare you, nothing will (click to enlarge):

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Goats gone wild!

Posted: February 8th, 2007 by Steve | Filed under: Igor, industry insider| 1 Comment

company namesIgor and Eat My Words are hosting an extravagant affair for those in the naming business. It’s happening on February 13, and the confirmed guest list includes sentient beings from Catchword, Salt, Landor, Interbrand, Metaphor, Lexicon, Idiom, Imagineering, Stoked Brands, etc.

So if you work at a naming firm or you are a domesticated farm animal, or both, send us an email and we’ll try and get you on the list.

THE MENU

  • Pesto baked brie & imported cheeses with fresh fruit, rustic breads & olives
  • Miniature filet mignon with balsamic caramelized onions & Roquefort
  • Spicy crab & scallop cakes with a cilantro lime aioli
  • Mini phyllo cups filled with spinach sun dried tomatoes feta cheese & olive tapenade
  • Smoked salmon wraps w baby spinach sweet onions & goat cheese
  • Marinated mushrooms, roasted beets, artichoke hearts, grilled asparagus platter with a roasted garlic saffron aioli
  • Ahi tartars on crisp wonton chips with wasabi aioli & tobiko caviar

THE NAMERS

  • Alexandra Watkins, Eat My Words
  • Alton Wright, Wright Brands
  • Amy Sherman
  • Andrea Michaels, Acme Naming
  • Anthony Shore, Landor
  • Aaron Hall, Catchword
  • Burt Alper, Catchword
  • Carol Miller, Red Pentameter
  • Daniel Edelstein
  • Eunice Park, Landor
  • Dave Hurlbert
  • Deborah Schatten, Brandese
  • Frank Binney
  • Jay Jurisich, Igor
  • Jonathan Littman, Simmer Branding Studio
  • Lisa Awrey
  • Marc Hershon, Simmer Branding Studio
  • Maria Cypher,Catchword
  • Mark Gunnion
  • Marty Neumeier, Neutron LLC
  • Nan Budinger, Metaphor
  • Nancy Friedman, Wordworking
  • Reed Kirk Rahlmann
  • Sandra Lee Messer
  • Shannon De Jong
  • Steve Cecil, Wherewords
  • Steve Manning, Igor
  • Steve Price, Lexicon
  • Susan Manning
  • Susan Carp, Imagineering
  • Tate Linden, Stoked Brands
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Furnulum pani nolo

Posted: August 7th, 2006 by Steve | Filed under: company names, industry insider, product names| No Comments

We are always interested in what other branding agencies have to say about naming:

When your customers read your ad, look at your business card or browse your web site, a conversation is initiated. And that conversation begins when they first hear or see your company name. Surprisingly, the name is one of the most under utilized, challenging and yet possibly the most evoking element of a brand. A good name or tag line isn’t about a good idea. Vocal brand expression announces and ignites your Brand Verve™, engages your customers, positions and differentiates your company and becomes the catalyst that resonates your message.

The name of the naming company that brings you this thoughtful paragraph on the importance of a company name? Check it out.

This company also lays claim to as many proprietary processes as we’ve seen, including Voice Catalyst™. Visual Cue™, Brand Verve™, Evocative Ambiance™. Brand ROI™, “Brand Irresistibility™, and Brand Developer™.

At least they have a catchty domain to help smooth things out. Imagine giving this out over the phone.

This is either one of the better parody sites we’ve seen — or not. It gets harder and harder to tell.

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Summer re-runs

Posted: July 30th, 2006 by Steve | Filed under: company names, industry insider, name changes| 1 Comment

One of our favorite articles about naming companies, from the London Telegraph:

Zounds! There’s a signo in my Xingux
By Brian Millar

It’s going to be a bad month for rainforests. Last week, the owner of the largest wireless phone network in the US announced it was changing its name from Cingular back to AT&T Wireless.

Just imagine the countless tons of stationery, junk mail, posters and shelf wobblers that are heading straight for the pulping mill. Not to mention the boxes of Kleenex used by the board and shareholders. All that money they gave to those nicely dressed people at the branding agency. All that talk about the added value a new name would bring.

It didn’t always work like this. Once upon a time, people didn’t really think too hard about names. Look at a list of the most valuable brands in the world, and you’ll see what I mean. Think of General Electric, General Motors and -my favourite – Standard & Poor’s. Standard? Poor’s? What kind of signals do these names give out?

Yet somehow these companies turned themselves into global giants, dragging their uninspiring, un-aspirational names along with them.

Then along came a new wave of entrepreneur who didn’t aspire to be another ICI. They wanted to express themselves as individuals. They were, after all, the Me Generation.

They created Virgin, Body Shop and Apple. Where they led, others were inspired to follow. The results were Yahoo! and Google and Snapple and Innocent and a whole shelfload of other evocatively named brands.

Of course, some people just have a flair for names, like Paula Yates. But not many of them seem to work for large corporations. So the suits turned to their smart pals in ad agencies for help.

This must have led to some good conversations, considering the kind of names ad agencies give themselves: “We need a snappy name. Call the guys at Messner, Vetere, Berger, McNamee and Schmetterer!”

To the admen, naming was old rope that wasn’t worth a lot of money. In its heyday, JWT named After Eight Mints and Mr Kipling Cakes, but gave the names away for free. In the case of Mr Kipling, they were actually forced to pitch for the advertising. Mr K drives an exceedingly hard bargain, it seems.

In the 1990s, the professionals moved in. The company-names-are-a-serious-business business was spearheaded by Landor Associates, a San Francisco-based design group that was so cool its headquarters were a ship. Landor brought “methodologies” with them. Rigorous, mysterious methodologies.

If you ever wondered where those bizarre unpronounceable company names come from, look to the Landor crew. Avolar, Midea, Avaya, Spherion, Onity, Lucent. And Lucent’s rival, Agilient. You know, like Lucent – but agile! Nice. Soon lots of big branding companies were picking up briefs and now our world is littered with Arrivas, Aptivas, Achievas and Avandas.

How did they persuade boards to part with vast sums of money for something that had always been free, and was better when it was? Here’s an answer from Interbrand’s website: “The chosen name, Xingux, is derived from a word with many positive connotations by using ‘signo’ (sign) with the abstract device of starting and ending with a letter X. The visual identity communicates the dynamism of the group’s business.”

Browsing these explanations is like reading the minute scrawls of a lunatic obsessive recluse: “Qarana originated from an Indian language called Jain meaning ‘to cause’… Hospira… is an abstract of the words hospital, spirit and inspire and the Latin word spero meaning hope.”

So that’s the important Jain and ancient Roman markets sewn up then.

Why do supposedly rational boards buy this new age semantic twaddle and saddle themselves with names which are unmemorable at best and unpronounceable at worst? Maybe Steve Manning has the answer. He’s worked with the likes of Apple, Nike, Gap and MTV. His portfolio of names is simple and resonant: Tickle, Zounds, and his own company, which is called Igor.

“Naming is messy, political and emotional,” says Manning. “Whenever a name stands out, someone will find a reason to object. I bet nobody had anything bad to say about Cingular or Consignia, because they don’t mean anything specific. But the trouble with meaningless names is that you have to spend millions making them mean something.”

So are we doomed to a semantically challenged future of driving to Accenture in our Alteras? Steve isn’t completely pessimistic. Take the Crossfire, one of Chrysler’s most successful recent products.

“Crossfire is a great name. It captures the mentality of the driver, an accountant who fantasises that he lives a James Bond-style double life. But imagine the meetings.

“‘Crossfire: gunfire that kills non-combatants. Death. War. Loss of control. Is this what we want folks to think about our car?’

“The Crossfire shows that some marketers still have the vision and fortitude to get a name like that through a big corporation.”

Maybe things will improve. Maybe names simply don’t matter. After all, Sir Martin Sorrell runs the biggest branding company on earth, and he’s in no hurry to change its name. It’s called WPP, which stands for Wire and Plastics Products.

# Brian Millar is creative director of Brand Tacticians, a company which is doing very nicely in spite of its boring name.

brian@brandtacticians.com

For more naming insanity, try our Landor naming quiz.


There’s a new naming blog in town

Posted: June 21st, 2006 by Steve | Filed under: company names, industry insider, product names| No Comments

A Hundred Monkeys, the naming company I worked at for five years prior to co-founding Igor, has added a blog to their site.

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Obfuscating and circuitous brand diagrams

Posted: June 8th, 2006 by Steve | Filed under: industry insider| 2 Comments

Do you enjoy the pure Dadaism of the disorienting brand diagram? We love it. Click on the thumbnails for a detailed view.

The Viagra brand diagram

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Brand strategy process diagram

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Brand DNA diagram

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Brand diagnostics diagram

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Universal needs map

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Corporate identity protection diagram

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We are serious collectors of odd branding visuals, so if you’ve found some good ones, please post them in the comments section.

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Thought police

Posted: June 5th, 2006 by Steve | Filed under: industry insider, product names| No Comments

Can a thought process be owned? Can you develop a way of thinking and legally exclude others from having similar thoughts? Is there such a thing as a “proprietary way of thinking” ? Of course not. Unless….if you are actually crazy enough to believe that your thought process is proprietary, then perhaps it is proprietary. You would probably be the only one thinking such thoughts. From the Ogilvy website:

We believe our job is to help clients build enduring brands that live as part of consumers’ lives and command their loyalty and confidence. How we go about doing this is through a proprietary way of thinking and working that we call 360 Degree Brand Stewardship ®.

“A proprietary way of thinking”, not sure if that is humor or hubris. And wouldn’t you have to know what and how everyone else was thinking before making such a statement?

Is the name “360 Degree Brand Stewardship” a product of the proprietary thought process? Is it demonstrative of it? If so, they are in little danger of anyone stealing their thoughts. Except maybe Anderson Cooper.

Via J-Walk

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Choosing the right domain

Posted: May 31st, 2006 by Steve | Filed under: industry insider| 4 Comments

Picking the best domain for your company is no simple task. But you can do your part to help a neighbor out. Which domain should this indecisive company choose, this domain or this domain?

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