Wow, "Cool Name" we say. But what makes it cool? Does
cool even have a meaning?
"Of
course," you say, "I can tell when a name is cool, even
though I can't define the term properly."
Well,
for starters, this is a great reason why computers cannot make
up names. How can someone program them to find cool names, when
no one can define it. Yet the beauty of the human brain is that
we can intrinsically feel when a name is cool. (Well, some of
us anyway). But if you get too analytical, or have little sense
of style, or marketing image, or tone, or language, then you are
probably not a cool name creator or decision maker. In such a
case, best you find someone you trust and let them decide what
is cool.
Cool
is like snow. It can get cold and freeze, or hot and melt. Yahoo
was such a cool name for an internet portal, compared to InfoSeek,
AltaVista, Go, and Lycos, until the very cool Google showed up.
Hotjobs.com wasn't bad compared to Careers.com, Jobs.com, etc.,
until Monster.com showed up. Seattle's Best Coffee and Channel
Islands Roasting Company were interesting (but only luke warm),
until Starbucks showed up.
Similarly,
AT&T was cool a long time ago, then more exciting names like
Verizon, T-Mobile and Cingular came along, which are much cooler.
And AT&T is trying to tell us it is the new AT&T and it
wants to be cool. Didn't we hear that party line from Oldsmobile
once before?
The
Pringles and Snapple names are cool, but most of us don't know
why.
And
on the technology front, the Razr and iPod are cool, but is it
because of their names or their product designs?
Many
consider Cisco a cool name for a networking company, even though
it is very close to Crisco - a separately famous brand. But why
is Cisco cool when the name is simply from the second half of
San Francisco (That is why their logo is half a Golden Gate Bridge
- cut lengthwise)?
So
until we hear the name, we cannot tell you if it is cool or not.
However, we have noticed these common characteristics of cool
names: