That "brandable" is a reseller self-delusion. If you have to write novel-length rationales why someone should buy your name, you don't have a product. It's a senseless strategy. But i learned that lesson pretty fast
Also, the reality of startups not branding themselves after a domain just because you happen to have it for sale.
The most important thing is something nobody had to tell me as it was obvious: Generic is king.
If we’re talking about completely invented words with no structure or linguistic logic, I 100% agree.
Pure made-up “brandables” without phonetic balance or semantic anchor rarely hold value.
Generic is king in liquidity.
Brandable is king in identity.
Single-word generics today are scarce and expensive.
In real brand development, the path is usually more practical.
When I work on brand positioning, I typically explore three directions:
- Two-word combinations.
Clean, adaptable, cost-efficient.
Alliteration when possible.
Example: Pink Pace.
- Structured variations of existing words.
Familiar roots, distinct form.
Example: Accorden.
- Phonetic positioning.
Owning the sound without drifting into typo territory.
Example: Vueer.
I usually prepare several structured options in advance.
Brand strategy starts from direction, not from what happens to be available.
Opening a restaurant isn’t about waiting for guests before buying ingredients.
Preparation shapes the outcome.
So I collect domains that meet defined structural criteria.
Some come with a clear development direction — not long explanations, but positioning clarity.
It’s simply part of the process.