|
Audits
If
you are developing and introducing new company or product names,
you can do customer and market research and testing. But what if
you already have a name and are not sure if it is right or working
for you? Sure, many researchers would be happy to take your money
and run off and do some customer research and see what customers
think. Except it takes a lot of time and money, and still does not
tell you about its legal status, its phonetic and linguistic implied
roots, or its position with regard to competitors and current naming
trends. More importantly, you are getting answers from users, not
from professional positioning and naming experts. People who know
how to think about what could be, as opposed to thinking about names
they already know - which almost by definition are not legally available.
We
study names every day. We create and track names. After all, Brighter
Naming is the home of the Name Critic and the original creator of
the Name of the Week feature for many years. But even we wouldn't
dare to venture an off-the-cuff opinion. There are too many dimensions
to a good name. That is why we have a formal process and set of
deliverables to put your name under the spotlights and see how it
stacks up.
And,
as usual, at a fixed price. So you will know where you stand.
Process
A
typical audit involves these components as a minimum:
- An
updated legal trademark report
- A
comprehensive common law report and analysis
- A
full phonetics and linguistics analysis
- A
study based on positioning vis a vis competitor names
- An
opinion on its longevity (or lack there of) based on current trends
- A
recommendation on how to proceed
Timeframe:
One to two weeks
Recommendations
Does
an audit mean we will recommend you change your name? Not necessarily.
If you ask your barber if you need a haircut, the answer is probably
yes. But we have been pleasantly surprised ourselves how often an
audit shows the name is not the problem, something else was (e.g.
graphics/positioning). Or in few great cases, the name was perfect....we
just had to help them sell it to upper management and advise them
on dealings with their own legal counsel.
And
in other cases, we find some problems or issues with the name -
but they were not show stoppers. So now the client knows what to
avoid, how to use the name, and what to emphasize.
Don't
change your name or brand unless you have to. An enormous amount
of market momentum can be lost!
|