September 13, 2006 4:00 AM PDT

Perspective: How not to name your company

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How not to name your company
This week I'm at the ThinkEquity Partners Growth Conference in San Francisco with a number of start-ups and established giants that are touting their companies.

What's truly remarkable is the collection of god-awful names on display. That's one craze the Internet era could not kill. A bad name just puts the wrong foot forward. Conversely, a good name can help launch a company. Gary Culliss, former CEO of DirectHit, a former growing search company, almost fell off his chair when he first heard about Google. And YouTube certainly benefited from a catchy name.

In any event, for you start-up execs, here's a handy guideline for how not to name your company:

1. Avoid redundancies. This was a lesson lost on Internet Gold-Golden Lines of Petach Tiva, Israel. And did we mention gold? I was actually looking forward to this presentation. I figured the CEO might dress up like Festus from the old "Gunsmoke" show and start shouting about claim jumping. But it is an Internet access provider.

Don't sound like you may have a criminal or shady past. This one's for you, DepoMed.

2. Don't sound like you may have a criminal or shady past. This one's for you, DepoMed. It sounds like you're going to sell vitamins out of the trunk of your car, not like you're a developer of advanced medical technology for gastric conditions. Similarly, Repros Pharmaceutical is only a few letters away from Repo Pharmaceuticals.

On a similar note, a very dry name can take on a slightly shady twinge--like you're hiding something. Take Central European Media Enterprises, for instance. It operates TV stations in the Ukraine, but it sounds like an import-export company. Then there is Portfolio Recovery Assets. It buys bad credit-card debt and chases down the debtors; in a sense, the name is trying to gloss over some ugly realities.

"One-third of our cash collection comes through the legal channel, but we prefer not to sue," Portfolio CEO Steven Fredericson calmly intoned. "We literally try to talk the money out of our customers."

3. Don't be lurid. Hello, XenoPort, NuVasive, and WiderThan. If you can spare the money, hire a focus group of 13-year-old boys to give you their reactions to all name suggestions. I also liked Pentaho Networks, which is what the dishwashers from El Salvador used to call me during my high school job.

4. Triple words are out. Yes, that's you, VendareNetblue. It didn't help PriceWaterhouseCooper. Even the Germans try to limit the combining of words to two.

5. Don't sound desperate or obvious. Good Technology. KnowFat. Though, sometimes it works. Hurray Holding: Enthusiasm makes up for a lot.

So what's good?

1. When in doubt, go medieval. If you can fit your company name into this sentence: "What (your name here) is but a boy. I will smote him in one blow," then you have chosen well. Ceragon Networks is a great example.

Weapons also work. Crossbow Technologies. This technique was successful for my old college roommate. He had a company named LightHammer. He picked the name because it both evoked "The Lord of the Rings" and "Hammer of the Gods" (the Led Zeppelin biography). He sold it to SAP.

2. Things that sound like a Spanish restaurant. Spansion. Taleo. Digitas.

3. If it sounds like someone that William Shatner would wrestle, you're all set. Santarus. Sirtris. DayStar. Questcor Pharmaceuticals.

Besides, that will make selecting a celebrity for trade show appearances easier.

Biography
Michael Kanellos is editor at large at CNET News.com, where he covers hardware, research and development, start-ups and the tech industry overseas. He has worked as an attorney, travel writer and sidewalk hawker for a time share resort, among other occupations.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 21 comments (Showing first 20 comments)
you mean Pendejo?
by maiyali September 13, 2006 7:55 AM PDT
but yes, Panteho does sound remarkably like the spanish word for
- well you know!
Reply to this comment View reply
ha ha this tickled me pink
by marycnet5 September 13, 2006 12:40 PM PDT
ha hah...

I write for "That Damn PC" at
http://thatdamnpc.com

and I didn't choose the name, but I like it.
That said, I also use it in my sig line
(as requested by my company, b5media)
and ummm.... gosh, some people are so offended, well, I'm sorry.
b5media wants me to use it in my sig ... so what can I do? except laugh.

and I hope google or some other site doesn't

and my other sig? it's got three words in it
http://ChowRescueDogs.org

I'm clippin' this article
A friend of mine is trying to choose the perfect
name for her company. Wouldn't you know it: her current company name (withheld) has three words in it too, for both domain and letterhead...

Thanks for the great insight!

Mary
Reply to this comment
Load of crap!!
by knowledgeSeeker September 14, 2006 12:30 AM PDT
This article makes no real sense. Choose whatever name you like. Just make sure that you deliver what you say and your company will profit and who knows, even become famous.
Check these silly names:
Google, IBM (International Business Machines), Apple, Dell. They all have terrible names but we love them.
Reply to this comment
More questionable names...
by Gomphos September 14, 2006 4:34 AM PDT
Yes, all real. List gathered while I was in college (pre-internet).

- Dress Barn
- Chandelier Shack
- Nail Cove
- Envelope Mart
- Security Hut
Reply to this comment
Not dot com
by alteal September 14, 2006 10:06 AM PDT
OhNoNot.com
Reply to this comment
How about?
by dmm September 14, 2006 10:14 AM PDT
Ineed$BIGTIMEorITSbellyup4me.com
Reply to this comment
you mean like news.com.com ?
by zarph2 September 14, 2006 10:20 AM PDT
hmmm.
Reply to this comment View reply
actual domain names
by thedreaming September 14, 2006 10:30 AM PDT
like-duhh.net
idiot.com
hell.com
heaven.com
presidentmoron.com (believe it or not)
googleityoumoron.com (yes, it's real)
redneckworld.com

Scary!
Reply to this comment View reply
Dress Barn!
by michael kanellos September 14, 2006 11:04 AM PDT
I love that one. There's no way it can sound upscale.

PS, I found a new one today:

Wretch.

It's a taiwanese online gaming site.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Its tough.
by Sirspa September 14, 2006 11:08 AM PDT
It seems like all the good names are taken, for someone starting out a new business, its difficult to find a domain that relates something to the business and means something to your customers. Hopefully I chose the right name for mine, but I am sure you guys would let me know if I didnt.
Sirspa,
http://www.free4youhosting.com
Reply to this comment
The Best: WackenHut
by wiley14 September 14, 2006 6:15 PM PDT
At work, the security is outsourced to WackenHut Security. 'Nuff said!
Reply to this comment
Have you lost it?
by lonny paul September 14, 2006 7:21 PM PDT
First of all, "Central European Media Enterprises" sounds like a group of either ad networks or television stations - and import / export company?

Also, your racial references regarding spanish restaurants and what the El Salvadorians called your during highschool, was probably short of appropriate.

CNET is well known as a respected journal with reliable, fair and non-racial profiling journalists.

At large?

Hope you still got a gig.

Lonny Paul
http://www.oy9.net
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
THIS is the best URL EVER
by September 16, 2006 5:21 PM PDT
I laughed my ass off when I read it. It's
"PENISland.net."












http://www.teckmagazine.com/content/view/631/43/
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