Noticing something interesting across recent brandable picks:
Some names look clean on paper — short, pronounceable, decent structure — but still don’t get inquiries.
Others, with similar surface quality, get traction much faster.
The difference doesn’t seem to be length or even “brandability” in the usual sense.
It’s how quickly a buyer can assign a use case to the name.
If a name feels like it already belongs somewhere (even loosely), it moves.
If it feels neutral but directionless, it tends to sit — even if it checks all the technical boxes.
So now I’m paying more attention to:
Curious how others here approach this:
Do you prefer names that are open and flexible,
or names that hint at a direction from day one?
Would be great to hear what’s actually moving in your portfolios.
Some names look clean on paper — short, pronounceable, decent structure — but still don’t get inquiries.
Others, with similar surface quality, get traction much faster.
The difference doesn’t seem to be length or even “brandability” in the usual sense.
It’s how quickly a buyer can assign a use case to the name.
If a name feels like it already belongs somewhere (even loosely), it moves.
If it feels neutral but directionless, it tends to sit — even if it checks all the technical boxes.
So now I’m paying more attention to:
- How quickly a use case comes to mind
- Whether the name suggests a category (even subtly)
- How much “interpretation work” the buyer has to do
Curious how others here approach this:
Do you prefer names that are open and flexible,
or names that hint at a direction from day one?
Would be great to hear what’s actually moving in your portfolios.