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If
you are not a dummy, and want to learn how to build your own brand,
then download a copy of Brighter Branding.
It
is geared for all of us who did not major in marketing while at
college.
See www.BrighterBranding.com
for more details.

Available
now at www.FodenPress.com
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Is your company or product about to blossom?
Will the name be as sweet too?
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- Have
your legal counsel(s) immediately review all registration and
trademark information, and file a name reservation with the Secretary
of State where you are incorporated. (See Resources
for list of all these offices).
- Have
legal counsel prepare and execute a change of name registration
with the state. If nothing else changes in your company charter
or ownership, this is only an administrative item with the state.
- As
soon as legal gives you the OK to use the new name, you may also
want to file a DBA (Fictitious Business Name) at your local county
for your old name, with new name as the owner. That way you can
do banking and other financial transactions for as long as necessary
in both names.
- Immediately
review graphics treatments for your corporate identity. Establish
both your logo and corporate style guide. Make sure all logos
included a little "TM". Provide this information on a web link
to all employees and product engineers too so that the new message
is consistent across all product designs and packaging, etc. Provide
samples of your new logo in usage to your trademark legal counsel
so they can complete your filing for a registered trademark.
- Once
your new business name is setup, file immediately for a registered
trademark with the US Patent and Trademark office (See Resources
section ). Final approval will take over a year and only then
can you use the ® symbol. Nowadays you can do this online yourself,
though a lawyer is recommended to ensure you get good strong,
broad coverage. If it will be a while before you use the name,
have your trademark counsel file an ITU (Intent to Use).
- While
your final tradename will be XYZ Inc. or XYZ Corp., or XYZ Technologies
(or similar) your trademark will be XYZ and steps should be taken
from the outset to protect it. Firstly, make sure that all printed
and electronic materials somehow squeeze in that little TM, as
follows: XYZ™ And at the bottom of every first brochure, press
release or web page place a statement, XYZ is a trademark of XYZ
Inc.
- Complete
registration of your new domain name through a good top-level
domain registrar (such as GoDaddy.com) and separately find a web
hosting provider(*). Point all other similar and related domain
names to your primary domain name. Establish a plan to convert
your existing website, leaving behind a long time link that says
"Our new name is…. Please find us at ……". While a domain name
registration alone does not give you a lot of legal rights, it
does establish date/time of usage and potentially takes the name
out of circulation.

-
Register your domain with all search engines and revisit all search
engine optimization techniques as soon as the new site(s) is live. [See www.FodenPress.com to download a copy of Brighter SEO, with all the latest techniques. New for 2010.]
- Have
your marketing department create a definitive re-launch plan.
At a minimum send a postcard to everyone in your corporate databases.
If you are not in stealth mode, this is a great chance to generate
some press and publicity, and to start the web links to your new
site.
- Consider
an event or ceremony - at a minimum for internal employees a sign
unveiling will do wonders for acceptance from those who were not
involved in the process. New business cards, coffee cups, T-shirts
or whatever will also go a long way to creating a comfortable
feeling with the new name.
- Come
up with a standard email signature block for all employees to
use. Email creates hundreds of brand touch points a day…so make
sure they use the new name and slogan right. Employees are valuable
brand missionaries for the company, so they need to carry your
name, logo and slogan at all times on their cards.
- For
90 days from public announcement day, train all phone operators
to correctly answer the phone in a manner like "Thanks for calling
ABC, formerly XYZ". Yes it may be long winded, but it is only
for a period, then you simply use the new name. Experience has
shown that most of your common contacts will have then heard of
you in this time frame, and will know the correct pronunciation
of your new name. Support personnel in particular are major employee
brand points.
- Do
good and don't look back. Whatever new name you pick, you will
see and hear things about it for a long time. This is only natural.
You have a great new name. But a name is only the shorthand for
your brand and can only do so much. A brand is a promise of an
experience. Go out and earn it.
(*)
It is strongly recommended that you do not register your domain
name through your web hosting company - so they can never hold your
website hostage and you can move to another hosting service (or
even bring it in-house) at any time.
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All
articles copyright Brighter Naming. You are welcome to link to these articles,
but not to put them on other sites.
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