Creative Names
A creative name is the starting point for everything worth building.
Famous Creative Names That Nailed It
Real-world names that became iconic. Here's what makes them work.
An accidental invention that became the most visited website in history — proof that a creative, unexpected name can define an entire industry.
Eastman wanted a name that was short, vigorous, and couldn't be mispronounced in any language — a masterclass in phonetic branding.
A two-syllable invented word with no baggage, no competitors, and infinite room to define its own meaning through the brand's actions.
Tips for Choosing Creative Names
The best creative names often come from lateral thinking — try words from a foreign language, scientific terminology, or archaic English.
Combine two unrelated words and see what emerges: 'Thunder' + 'Scroll' = ThunderScroll. The contrast itself creates intrigue.
Short names (4-8 characters) are easier to trademark, domain-register, and remember.
Say the name as part of a sentence: 'Have you heard of [name]?' If it feels natural, it passes the conversation test.
Avoid names that require explanation at every introduction — unless the explanation is your pitch.
Frequently Asked Questions
A creative name breaks a pattern — it surprises the listener, evokes an unexpected image, or pairs concepts in a way that feels fresh. It's memorable precisely because it doesn't sound like everything else in its category.
Both approaches work brilliantly. Invented words (Kodak, Spotify, Zoom) are easier to trademark and own fully. Existing words used in new contexts (Apple, Amazon, Stripe) carry built-in emotional associations that can accelerate brand recognition.
Test it with people outside your industry. If they can't roughly guess the vibe or remember it after one hearing, it may be too abstract. Creative should mean surprising, not confusing.
Invented or highly abstract names are harder to rank for initially since no one searches for them yet. Counter this by pairing your brand name with strong descriptive keywords in your website's title tags and meta descriptions.
Yes. Share your top candidates in a simple survey with your target audience. Ask which name they'd trust, which they'd remember, and which feels most aligned with your brand's purpose.
How to Find the Perfect Creative Name
Start with feeling, not logic
Explore five naming archetypes
Use constraints to spark creativity
Build a shortlist and live with it
Validate before you launch
Related Categories
Curious about what names mean? Explore Name Meanings →