Founder, Lexicon Branding; Pioneer of Brand Naming
4,000+ PROJECTS
The Principle
Your Name Is Forever
"Your brand name, nothing's going to be used more often or for longer than that name. Design will change, messaging will change, products will change, but that name is there."
The name compounds in value with every use
Cumulative advantage: stronger bond over time
Names don't need updating — they're permanent fixtures
Everything else evolves; the name stays
Why Names Matter
Asymmetric & Cumulative Advantage
Distinctiveness: You need an unfair advantage before launch. A descriptive name (Cloud Pro, Codium) gives you zero edge.
The Cumulative Compounding: With each customer interaction, the bond strengthens. They see it more, buy more, trust builds.
Branding Longevity: Design will change. Messaging will shift. But the name is there for decades, even centuries.
Anti-Imitating: A great name makes copying impossible. A descriptive name invites competition to do the same.
The Melian Dialogue
Ancient marketing classic: asymmetric advantage is about building power before engagement. A great name is your first asymmetric advantage.
The Harry Potter Lesson
Rejected 16+ times. Novel rejected more. Great names feel risky because they're new. Familiarity breeds comfort, not novelty.
The Process
Three Phases: Identify, Invent, Implement
IDENTIFY: Behavior & Landscape
Ask: "How do you behave now? How do you want to behave?"
Extract rhythm from that behavior — is it calming, sharp, energetic?
Map the competitive landscape — what words/brands already exist?
Create a "creative framework" (metaphorical window, not logical objectives)
INVENT: Creative + Linguistic
Creative teams generate diverse name candidates with different personalities
Linguists evaluate for: cultural implications, political risks, offensive connotations
Every 3rd or 4th project, linguists kill names the team loves (for good reasons)
We focus on behavior and experience, not positioning and values. That's old thinking. This is a digital, interconnected world — names must feel forward, not historical.
Letter Energy
The Sonic Profile
V — Most alive, vibrant, energetic (Vercel, Viagra, Corvette)
B — Reliable, stable, solid (Blackberry, powerful double-B punch)
Z — Noisy, sharp, high signal (Azure — stands out in the cloud crowd)
X — Fast, crisp, innovation, cutting-edge (semantically tied to progress)
S — Smooth, flowing, calming (Sonos — liquid energy)
The Palindrome PatternSonos can flip both horizontally and upside-down and remain the same. That geometric perfection is part of why it sticks — beautiful symmetry.
Contrarian
What Great Namers Know
✗You'll know it when you see itINSTEAD →✓ You almost never will. Most clients lie about this. They need time to process and feel uncomfortable first.
✗Comfort = good namingINSTEAD →✓ Comfort is the enemy. If your team likes it immediately, you don't have the name yet. Tension and polarization are signs of strength.
✗Big brainstorms create great namesINSTEAD →✓ They don't. Brainstorms create comfort and consensus. Naming requires discipline, linguistics, and solitary creative thinking.
✗Descriptive names are saferINSTEAD →✓ They're the riskiest. You lose instantly. Imaginative names create cumulative advantage and are impossible to copy.