C'mon over to our new website and blog... we'll be waiting for you. All of the same posts are there so you won't miss any of the fun.
C'mon over to our new website and blog... we'll be waiting for you. All of the same posts are there so you won't miss any of the fun.
Posted at 04:13 PM in * Client Testimonials, * Tips on Naming, *Best Names & Taglines, About Eat My Words, After Hours, Biz Books, Branding, Clever Names, Competitors, Funny Names, Head Scratchers (Name Shame Hall of Fame), Hot Dish, I Have a Bean, Make Mine a Million, Mark My Words, Money Making Marketing Method, Name Boy, Name Contests, Named After Obama, Namer Tests, Names in the News, Naming Firms, Naming Mistakes, New Hires, Our Newest Clients, Out of the Office, Parties, Pet Names, Press, Rebranding the Pit Bull, ROI, Signs You're in Ghana, SMILE & SCRATCH Test, Speaking Engagements, Spoon Me, Sports, Taglines/Slogans, Tasty Tidbits, Trademarks, Tweet My Words, Unfortunate Names, Videos, Web/Tech, Wordplay | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: Brand Name Suggestions, brand names, business name suggestions, business names, clever names, company name suggestions, company names, company names, cool product names, corporate names, funny names, how to name a company, how to name a company, name a business, name company, Name company, name contests, name ideas, name product, name suggestions, Naming agencies, naming firm, Naming firms, naming mistakes, naming your business, new company name, new product name, Product name suggestions, product namer, product namer, product names, Product Naming, professional namer
Posted at 11:14 AM in * Client Testimonials, * Tips on Naming, *Best Names & Taglines, About Eat My Words, After Hours, Biz Books, Branding, Clever Names, Client News, Competitors, Funny Names, Hot Dish, I Have a Bean, Make Mine a Million, Mark My Words, Money Making Marketing Method, Name Boy, Name Contests, Named After Obama, Namer Tests, Names in the News, Naming Firms, Naming Mistakes, New Hires, Our Newest Clients, Out of the Office, Parties, Pet Names, Press, Rebranding the Pit Bull, ROI, Secret Processes, Signs You're in Ghana, SMILE & SCRATCH Test, Speaking Engagements, Spoon Me, Sports, Taglines/Slogans, Tasty Tidbits, Trademarks, Tweet My Words, Unfortunate Names, Videos, Web/Tech, Wordplay | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Tags: Brand Name Suggestions, brand names, business name suggestions, business names, clever names, company name suggestions, company names, company names, cool product names, corporate names, funny names, how to name a company, how to name a company, name a business, name company, Name company, name contests, name ideas, name product, name suggestions, Naming agencies, naming firm, Naming firms, naming mistakes, naming your business, new company name, new product name, Product name suggestions, product namer, product namer, product names, Product Naming, professional namer
Posted at 06:09 PM in Competitors | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
We are always amused by our competitors when they glorify
their naming processes as “proprietary” methodology and come up with mumbo
jumbo voodoo jive to describe what’s behind the curtain. Sometimes all that
behind the curtain is empty space. Let
us say it again:
Everyone
names things the same way, but some just do it better than others. When
you can stand by your names
proudly, you don’t need falderal to sell your names.
Which brings us to worldwide brand strategy, naming firm
and falderal experts, NameTag® International,
Inc.
( who claims their names are…)
Here is their International
mumbo jumbo voodoo jive:
“Our proprietary Idiotics™ Ideonics™
process encompasses BrandVision™,
strategic ideation, trademark assessment, brand testing and brand rollout
assistance.”
Falderal
to English translation:
Our process, that is like everyone else’s, involves thinking
up names, checking for conflicts, testing
it and stuff then pretend that we came up with great names (although we won’t tell
you that part). Then, in our downtime,
we sit around and think up junk like Ideonics™,
BrandVision™
and:
InSight
Research, which breaks down into four
distinct options for your brand research needs:
·
4Sight™ provides our clients with rapid market indicators of the
viability of their brand name.
·
EquiTest™ measures the brand equity of an existing name.
·
WorldTest™ serves as an international brand inference testing
procedure providing a preliminary, global linguistic analysis in languages
specified by the client.
·
VeriTest™ addresses global research and is designed to assist clients
with name assessment and final name candidate viability
Yikes. Nothing new there.
Here is what you get with Ideonics™ et al ; Everything from Amazara
to Zintrepid,
with STŌK,
Sorian,
Aerius,
Cognis
and Teligen
in between.
They say:
We Say:
Eat My Words creates truly unforgettable names like Spoon Me frozen yogurt, Cake Financial, Frigid ice cream, BackBeat ear buds and iPod clock radio we named Moondance. We can do the same for you….and we promise never to say falderal ever again.
Posted at 08:46 PM in Branding, Competitors, Head Scratchers (Name Shame Hall of Fame), Secret Processes | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Our annual Fallapalooza cocktail party was a huge success, with nearly 80 guests at the Eat My Words party pad, including Eat My Words' Gina, Rena and bartender Tina. Held on a warm fall evening, the outdoor patio was the perfect place to marvel at Chef Ciado cook his delicious paella and sip homemade Sangria. Guests included clients and friends from Landor, Perspective Branding, Deutsch Design Works, OnRequestImages, USA Today, Aerielle, Smart Design, Firewood, Sandbox Suites, and Wunderman
Posted at 03:19 PM in About Eat My Words, After Hours, Competitors, Parties | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Sometimes we find juicy news not worthy of a full blog post, yet too darn good to not share with you. These "Tasty Tidbits" are digestible bites of news about new names and the naming industry and what we think of them here at Eat My Words. Bon Appetit!
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A new government acronym is born.
Watch politicians for the next decade talk about EESA, or the... Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008. This 3 page, then 110 page and now 451 page document spells out how the $700 billion will be spent. We are geeks and read it. What is interesting is that everything past page 113 are extras having nothing to do with the bailout. We especially love the addition at the bottom of page 300 (Sec 505: Exemption From Excise Tax For Certain Wooden Arrows Designed For Use By Children).
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Sarah Palin apparently thinks David D. McKiernan, the current Commander of the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan is in fact George Brinton McClellan a major general for the Union army during the American Civil War.
Also loved when she called her opponent O'Biden. One heartbeat away, you betcha!
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Virgin Airlines wusses out and names their airline experience Airphoria.
We get it, you get euphoric while you are in the air. Why not just use the real word? Lame.
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We love House. In this week's episode, the patient du jour was having a reaction to three unnamed clinical trial drugs he was taking as a guinea pig. House wanted to give the medications a name so he based them on his three minions. The names of the medicines were, Bisexidrine, Cuckoldisol and WorldSorestKneesisil. Watch the episode, it'll make sense then.
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Here is the Namethis.com lame name of the week:
This week we have a tie:
For "a gym which have been in operation for some time in Sunshine Coast are looking to change names and change business direction to become more of a boutique personal training studio than a gym."
The winner is Mevolutionfitness.com. The client has not snapped this winner up as of 2:37AM 10-04-08
a Global Lifestyle Hotel that is Unconventional, Transgenerational, Social, Eclectic, Sexy -but not obviously so."
The winner is Communinnty.com. The client has not snapped this winner up as of 2:37AM 10-04-08
Last week's fav, "Pixelouvre.com", is also still available.
According to the website they have "rewarded" $20,670 to their crowdsource community to date. Since they "reward" 80% of their income, that means Namethis.com's gross profit is $5,176.50 for the four months they have been active. That equates to $1,291.88 per month. From this they have to cover all payroll, rent, latte's, antacid, cell phone charges to their VC investors explaining how $1,291.88 a month before expenses is an adequate return on their $3,000,000 investment, aspirin, therapist fees, thesaurus to come up with new terms for "start up phase" and Internet access to Monster.com for searching for their next job.
Posted at 08:40 PM in Competitors, Funny Names, Head Scratchers (Name Shame Hall of Fame), Naming Firms, Naming Mistakes, Tasty Tidbits | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Sometimes we find juicy news not worthy of a full blog post, yet too darn good to not share with you. These "Tasty Tidbits" are digestible bites of news about new names and the naming industry and what we think of them here at Eat My Words. Bon Appetit!
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Oracle announced its first hardware product this week, called Exadata. Yawn. Apparently, Oracle has been working on this product for three years. However, it sounds like they started working on the name part about three days ago and grabbed something off of a whiteboard at the last minute. We can't find a description anywhere on the Oracle website on the meaning of Exadata, but they show a picture of the product that has an "X" on it, so that makes it clear....
Also, there is a joint HP /Oracle product that is being simultaneously released, which they are calling....wait for it......the
HP Oracle Database Machine
Really? Isn't that a description rather than a name?
Oracle CEO Larry Ellison refers to the products as "radical new thinking". Maybe, but not so much for the names.
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In the "Sure, That Will Fix the Problem" files comes this "rebranding" news from WPP Group's MindShare:
"The agency's North American senior executives are relinquishing their formal job titles. For example, Scott Neslund, CEO of Mindshare North America, will now be identified simply as Scott Neslund, Mindshare North America, the agency said."
In phase 2 of the job title changes to be implemented early next year, he will be identified simply as, "The Scottmeister".
Also, for no apparent reason, they will now be known as Mindshare, not MindShare. In related news, they are negotiating with the City of New York (their headquarters location) to change the city's spelling to neW yorK.
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Interesting Trademark Lawsuit of the week: Intel is suing Intellife Travel for trademark infringement. We are all for protection of your trademark, but come on.....
One is a small travel agency specializing in travel between North America and China and one is the world's leader in semiconductor technology. Well, we're confused, but not in the way Intel thinks we are.
Techcrunch lays it all out for us.
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We can't help our fascination with the trainwreck of an idea, Namethis.com. Watch later for our discussion why it cannot possibly succeed as a real business (hint: it has something to do with venture capital backers wanting an actual ROI). If anyone wants to give us $3 million, we'll tell you how to make it really work.
In the meantime, here is the Namethis.com lame name of the week: "Pixelouvre.com", an original name for a modern e-commerce art gallery. The company preferred a "one-word name" that "must be available as a .com". That one sentence alone explains dreck like Pixelouvre.com.
As anyone who knows anything about domain names knows, one-word names are all gone. Also, emphasis on names that must be available as .com forces the production of junk names. In any case, the explanation behind the creation of Pixelouvre.com is:
"pixel + louvre. pixel represents the ecommerce." (a pixel is a single point in a graphic image..how does that represent e-commerce exactly?) "louvre: an art museum that is a famous tourist attraction in
Paris (Right.... Lucky it starts with an "L" or else it wouldn't have worked with pixe"l") "the domain is available" (there is a reason for that).
P.S. As of 6:00 am Pacific time on 09-26-08, Pixelouvre.com was still available, so maybe the company that bought the name doesn't want to waste another $9.99 to lock up this winner. We were going to buy it on a lark, but decided we didn't want to face a Pixelouvre.com domain dispute dustup. For free, we offer the following (domain names available) as backups: PixelSmithsonian.com, PixelMuseumOfModernArt.com and PixelTheGetty.com.
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Posted at 08:48 AM in Competitors, Head Scratchers (Name Shame Hall of Fame), Naming Firms, Naming Mistakes, Secret Processes, Tasty Tidbits, Trademarks | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Sometimes we find juicy news not worthy of a full blog post, yet too darn good to not share with you. These "Tasty Tidbits" are digestible bites of news about new names and the naming industry and what we think of them here at Eat My Words. Bon Appetit!
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Bengal Star Receiver Ditches Old Name (but fails at math)
Bengals receiver Chad Johnson (he is number 85) has legally changed his name to Chad Javon Ocho Cinco. The reason is that he wanted Ocho Cinco to be on the back of his football jersey, but the team would not permit that since their policy is to only have the players last name listed. Spanish is not our native tongue, but ocho cinco translates to 8, 5. 85 is ochenta y cinco.
Utilice su casco número ochenta y cinco.
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Titan Prisons Rebranded as "Cluster Prisons"
Seems the English populace thinks the Titan Prisons (so named because extra large jails holding up to 2,500 prisoners) are not appropriate for proper rehabilitation. The solution? The Ministry of Justice is "rebranding" them as Cluster Prisons. Mind you, it is not changing anything but the name. It sounds like a cluster something. Other "rebranding" names considered were Crumpets, High Tea, Banger, Cheeky, Pish Posh and Mary Poppins.
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E-namers - is №1 worldwide interactive naming-center, or so they say.
Um, we doubt it. E-ven their name sucks.
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You know where the heart of the continent is? No?...... It's Winnipeg, as evidenced by their new slogan:
Welcome to Winnipeg – Heart of the Continent. Proving once again that Canadians should give up on slogans that go nowhere. Runner up was Winnipeg - Spleen of the Continent.
Looks like they drew quite a crowd. What's with the random VW racer?
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Posted at 05:59 PM in Competitors, Head Scratchers (Name Shame Hall of Fame), Naming Mistakes, Taglines/Slogans, Tasty Tidbits | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Sometimes we find juicy news not worthy of a full blog post, yet too darn good to not share with you. These "Tasty Tidbits" are digestible bites of news about new names and the naming industry and what we think of them here at Eat My Words. Bon Appetit!
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America's # 1 Populist ! blows the lid off of the Naming Industry! ! A populist is an advocate of democratic principles, making Naming Consultants Socialists or Communists we guess. His in-depth investigation uncovered our biggest secret; that Naming Consultants get $500,000 per name. He also introduced us to a great new word to explain what we do...humbuggery. He claims that "I’m not a naming consultant, so who am I to question?" Right. You be a populist and we'll name stuff. We'll give you the friend discount and charge you only $400,000.
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In an article entitled The 6 Coolest Jobs for Weird Majors, one of our competitors explains their naming process:
Some Eat My Words differences in process:
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"Branding expert" Laura Reis recently changed the name of her blog to Ries' Pieces in an entry entitled "The Time for Change in Now." She explains that "pieces is a great triple entendre that describes my blog posts, TV appearances as well as the correct pronunciation of my name."
Further she fesses up that "there is one problem. You can’t use apostrophes and other punctuation marks in a website address. But you can cover your bases by buying close but incorrect names and redirecting them to your main site. I got RiessPieces.com and RiesesPieces.com to cover my new name and address RiesPieces."
She goes on to say, "No name is ever 100% perfect, but Ries’ Pieces is a name that I think is worth moving to." WHAAAAAAAAAT????????? No name is ever 100% perfect???!!! On the contrary.
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Posted at 11:28 PM in Competitors, Funny Names, Head Scratchers (Name Shame Hall of Fame), Hot Dish, Naming Firms, Naming Mistakes, Tasty Tidbits | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
This is a continuing series of postings that will spotlight other naming firms. We think our clients should have a choice, and clearly Eat My Words is not the only naming firm in business.
Next up is the self-proclaimed "Last Word in Naming", Zenmark.
Besides being the last word in naming, they are the first to apply for a patent on a naming process, or should we say a "Verbal Identity Engineering Process."
Really. No joke. They did it. Here is an excerpt from the press release:
Wow.
We have a few questions:
This (patent pending) process is so revolutionary and unique that Zenmark warns...yes warns potential clients that:
"Zenmark’s Verbal Identity Engineering (patent pending) Process can currently be shared with you and your team only under non-disclosure. Federal law prohibits any unbound discussion of the trade-secret details involved in the Zenmark Design Team’s unique creative development in the area of naming and branding."
We share mints with our clients and never threaten them with federal statutes.
OK, so what does all this double-talk and folderal about engineering and scientific scrutiny get you?
The Zenmark Portfolio!
So that's what a rigorous and repeatable methodology buys you. On the other hand, if you want a name that is free-wheeling and unique like Neato home cleaning robots, Spoon Me frozen yogurt, Cake Financial, Frigid ice cream orMonkey Dunks dips for kids, give us a call.
Posted at 01:47 PM in Competitors, Head Scratchers (Name Shame Hall of Fame), Naming Firms, Naming Mistakes, Secret Processes | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)