Naming a business feels like it should take a flash of inspiration. In practice it is a process, and the people who name well just run that process instead of waiting for lightning.
Here is a version you can finish in an afternoon.
Step 1: Write down the raw material
Before any clever wordplay, list the plain facts:
- What you make or do, in one phrase.
- Who it is for.
- The feeling you want the name to carry, for example trustworthy, fast, premium or friendly.
- Three or four words your customers actually use for your thing.
This list is the fuel for everything next. A generator is only as good as the keywords you give it.
Step 2: Generate, do not agonise
Take your strongest keyword and generate a batch of names. A good generator will blend your word with brandable ones, add suffixes like -ly or -ify, build short compounds, and invent pronounceable words you would never think of.
Do not judge each one as it appears. Generate fifty, skim for the five or six that make you pause, and move on. Volume plus a quick gut reaction beats staring at one idea.
Step 3: Shortlist on the practical tests
Take your handful of favourites and score them:
- Easy to say and spell after hearing once.
- Short, ideally one or two syllables.
- Distinct in your industry.
- No awkward second meaning.
Anything that fails these is out, no matter how much you like it. A name you constantly have to spell on the phone will quietly cost you customers.
Step 4: Check what you can actually claim
This is where most names die, so do it early. For each shortlisted name, check:
- The domain, starting with the .com.
- The social handles you will use.
- Your national trademark register for the name in your category.
The business name generator on this site checks the domain and handles for you the moment you open a name, so you can cut anything that is already gone without opening ten browser tabs.
Step 5: Sit with the winner
Once one or two names survive, live with them for a day. Say each out loud, write it as it would appear on an invoice, an email address and a sign. Ask a few people to react. The name that still feels right tomorrow, and that you can claim, is your answer.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Falling for a name before checking the domain.
- Picking something so descriptive it boxes you in if you expand later.
- Choosing a spelling no one can guess (dropping vowels can look modern but hurts word of mouth).
- Ignoring the trademark check because the domain happened to be free.
Run the steps in order and the name almost picks itself. Start with a keyword, generate a batch, and let availability do the filtering.