The Name Game
Welcome to the vicious world
of corporate name-creation, where $75,000 buys you a suffix and competing
shops slur each other over the virtues of Agilent and Avilant.
By Ruth Shalit
November 30, 1999 | W hen Hewlett-Packard
decided last year to spin off its instrumentation and measurement
division into a separate company, executives at the computer hardware
giant did everything they could to smooth the transition. Shareholders
had to be notified. A top-flight management team hired. The trades
brought on board. But such housekeeping duties were a minor matter
compared to the vast existential task that loomed -- a five-phase,
cross-unit "identity project," intended to unearth a suitably
momentous name for the $8 billion enterprise. The name had to be a
grand, monstrous, powerful thing -- broad-shouldered yet luscious,
tempered by oaky bass notes of maturity, courage, character -- like
a 1961 Cheval Blanc. "This was similar to the Lucent process,"
says David Redhill, global executive director for Landor Associates,
the identity firm hired last year to supervise the project. "We
needed a tremendous name that really was magisterial and compelling,
and had a certain amount of stature right away."
As with Lucent, Redhill and his team approached
the problem with ingenious thoroughness, devising a naming module
that would eventually cost the client more than $1 million and involve
up to 40 Landor executives around the globe. The first step was to
interview key executives at the massive new entity, then known only
by its code name of NewCo. "We wanted to know what the company
needed to be; what it was aiming to be," says Redhill. "The
aim was not to manipulate them, but really to draw out of them exactly
how they visualized people feeling about their brand."
The exercise got off to an unpromising
start. NewCo executives volunteered that they wanted the company to
be perceived as strong, innovative, dynamic and caring. "We've
done this process with hundreds of companies," Redhill says wearily.
"They all say, 'We want to be perceived as strong, innovative,
dynamic and caring.'" And therein, it seemed, lay the problem.
Though top NewCo executives had avowed their intention to be different,
to change the paradigm, to think outside the nine dots, "the
qualities they were aiming to project were in fact common currency,"
Redhill sighs.
Fortunately, the Landor identity crew
had come prepared for exactly this possibility. "We did mood
boards," Redhill says. "We did random visual associations,
attached to sequential words. And so, when they said, 'We want to
be strong' we would show them a picture of an ocean wave breaking.
And we'd ask: 'Do you want to be strong like a force of nature?' Then
we'd show them a picture of a metal chain link fence. And we'd ask,
'Do you want to be strong like a chain? Strong but breakable?'"
The final slide was a close-up of a human face. "We said, 'Perhaps
you want to be strong like human nature -- indomitable and immutable.'
And they said, 'Yes, that's us. That's exactly how we imagine people
feeling about our brand.'"
After four months of this sort of intensive
brand therapy, the group settled upon the only name capable of conveying
such protean emotions -- "Agilent." They took the name into
focus groups, where, to their great delight, it was received with
admiration, approval and total open-mouthed attention. "I've
never seen anything like it," says Amy Becker, who works alongside
Redhill in Landor's verbal branding and naming group. "This was
a pretty rarefied crowd. We're not talking about the mass-consumer,
chips-eating sort of person. This was a very particular sort of business-to-business
decision maker. A hard group to impress. And they were just delighted."
The name was also a hit among the NewCo rank and file. "It's
funny, because 'Agilent' isn't even a real word," muses Redhill.
"So it's pretty hard to get positive and negative impressions
with any real basis in experience. But I'm pleased to say that when
we unveiled the name last month at an all-company meeting, a thousand
employees stood up and gave the name a standing ovation. And we thought,
'We have a good thing here.'"
But did they? Among Landor's rival name-slingers
around the Bay Area, the choice of Agilent was immediately greeted
with snorts of derision. "The most namby-pamby, phonetically
weak, light-in-its-shoes name in the entire history of naming,"
declared Rick Bragdon, president of the naming firm Idiom. "It's
like a parody of a Landor name. It's insipid. It's ineptly rendered
... It ought to be taken out back and shot."
Steve Manning of A Hundred Monkeys, a
San Francisco naming firm, was also appalled. "What a crummy
name," he says. "It sounds like a committee name. 'Who's
your competition?' 'Lucent.' 'Well, we want to play off Lucent --
only we're agile. I mean, if you wanted a name like that, I could
come up with that kind of name in about four seconds."
Naseem Javed, president of ABC Namebank
in New York, tries to be more charitable in his assessment. "Mm-hm.
Mm-hm. Yes, I did hear about the Agilent mess," he says. A long
sigh escapes his lips. "Perhaps it would be best if Landor just
closed up shop," he says quietly. "I don't want to trash
them too badly. It's just that their last four, five naming projects
have been total disasters."
Landor, for its part, is quick to defend
its handiwork. "To our critics, I can only say, vive la diffrence,
vive the competition and vive individual entrepreneurialism,"
says Redhill, in his gentle, grandfatherly voice. "We have the
utmost confidence in our model." To drive home that point, Redhill
put me in touch with Darius Somary, the research director who had
confirmed to an empirical certainty the allure of names like Agilent.
"From a quantitative standpoint, it's a very appealing name,"
Somary told me. "On all the scalar measures of distinctiveness
and appropriateness, it tested right off the charts."
Welcome to big-league corporate naming,
a Pynchonesque netherworld of dueling morphemes, identity buckets
and full-scale linguistic sabotage. What was once a diverting sideline
for mild-mannered grad students has become an increasingly lucrative
and increasingly cutthroat profession, as blue-chip consulting firms
schedule raids on college English departments and linguistics nerds
scramble to shift their focus from the syntax of negation in the Anatolian
languages to the murkier precincts of corporate identity.
The professional back-stabbing
is a bit puzzling, given that professional naming, above all, is supposed
to be fun. The literature of the namers brims with references to "joy,"
"play" and to the capacity for childlike wonderment. This
image of naming gurus as paragons of corporate delight would be more
believable, however, if the namers didn't spend so much time tearing
each other to shreds. "You should call up Ira Bachrach of NameLab,"
breathes one namer. "He doesn't even have meetings with clients.
It's just taking a bunch of morphemes and phonemes, and crunching
them through the computer. Unbelievable." Another whispers honeyed
words of ill counsel about Enterprise IG. "Their names are nothing
more than a bunch of concatenized prefixes and suffixes -- totally
soulless," he insinuates. "I'd love to see you blow this
wide open."
In the extreme sport that is modern corporate
nomenclature, trust is in short supply, and paranoia reigns. "I
used to work by writing names on individual pieces of paper and sticking
them up on the wall," says Steve Manning of A Hundred Monkeys.
"I don't do that anymore." The reason? "People were
walking around the room with cameras, taking pictures of my names,"
Manning says blearily. "It got a little creepy. I mean, this
is Silicon Valley. People move around a lot ... If they liked one
of my names, they might be drawn to register it as a URL. And that
would be very bad. Because, you know, I own those names."
What can explain this tense, sour mood?
Part of the reason is increased competition. While the corporate-identity
racket used to be dominated by a few big players -- Landor, Interbrand,
Enterprise IG -- the market is now glutted with professional namers,
all scrounging for the same clients. In addition to Lexicon, Idiom
and Metaphor, the discriminating brand managers may now choose between
NameLab, NameBase, Name/It, NameTrade, Namestormers and TrueNames.
Each of the firms has its own jealously guarded methodology, a signature
"naming module" that distinguishes it from its competitors.
Enterprise IG has its proprietary NameMaker program, good for generating
thousands of names by computer. Landor uses a double-barrelled approach;
deploying both its "Brand Alignment Process" and a "BrandAsset
Valuator." Others find that their module must be described in
more than a few words. "We have a wonderful approach," says
Rick Bragdon of Idiom. "We use an imaginative series of turbo-charged
naming exercises, including Blind Man's Brilliance, Imagineering,
Synonym Explosion and Leap of Faith ... We find that when clients
are playing, literally playing creative games, they create names that
come from a place of joy, a place of fun. A place that allows them
to transcend the drudgery of naming, and come up with names that are
fresh and different." Bragdon's most recent naming project? "I-Motors,"
he says sheepishly.
But a cutthroat marketplace isn't the
only reason for the jaundiced mood. Among ad agencies and corporate
marketing departments, and even at the naming companies themselves,
there is a grim consensus that, despite all the frantic bonding and
interfacing, despite the morpheme-munching computer modules, names
today are worse than ever. "I tend to steer clients away from
hiring naming companies," says Marc Babej, a brand planner at
Kirshenbaum, Bond & Partners, a New York ad agency. "As naming
has become professionalized, it's led to a certain norming standard.
The names have come to sound more and more alike." Babej explains
what he means by this. "You can imagine how, at one time, Livent
might have sounded new and hot," he says. "Well, but now
we have Lucent. And we have Aquent and Avilant and Agilent and Levilant
and Naviant and Telegent. What's next, Coolent? What you have here
is clients being taken for a ride."
Naseem Javed, president of ABC Namebank
in New York, speculates that someday, historians will look back on
the late '90s as a low point in the annals of naming. "There
were periods in history of terrible architecture," he says. "But
this architecture was actually presented to popes and kings and lords.
And they actually went out, and lived in this type of housing! Why,
then, should we be surprised that corporations are going out and spending
5, 10, 15, 20 million dollars promoting these dumb names? And then
going out and changing them to names that are even dumber?"
Javed elaborates: "As I see it, there
is a real malpractice issue," he says. "If you've just developed
a great stereo system, I can see paying $1 million for a great name
-- Sony. But what if you hire the same company for another naming
project? And the names they come back with are Bony Cony, Dony Zony?
At what point do you say, forget it, this is not worth $1 million?
This is not even worth $5."
At no point, responds Landor. "We
don't have an issue at all" with sound-alike names, Redhill tells
me. "Think of the names Larry and Mary," he says soothingly.
"They have the same suffix. But the meaning is completely different!"
So, too, he says, with Landor creations Livent, Lucent and Agilent.
Other top naming firms, aware that their names have come to resemble
each other, have taken to attaching lagniappes of meaning to individual
letters. Think of it as a couture touch, the syntactical equivalent
of scalloped stitching on an inside hem. Michele Lally, global marketing
director for Reuters-Dow Jones Interactive, recently renamed Factiva,
is grateful to her naming company, Interbrand, for helping her stand
out in a world of Factevas and Actevas. She has sought refuge in,
as she puts it, "the semiotics of the letter i." "Have
you seen our letterhead?" she asks. "We do the i as a biacron.
An i with a circle on top. Or 'the bubble,' as we call it internally."
Lally herself is bubbling over with enthusiasm for the bubble. "The
brand circle denotes infinite possibilities," she says. "We
very much hope that bubble, that icon, will come to symbolize business
information in airport lounges worldwide."
Ron Kapella, head of Enterprise IG, seems
to be pursuing a similar tack with Naviant, an online data-mining
company. Eager to distinguish his brainchild from its sound-alike
cousins Agilent and Navigent, he, too, has honed in on the letter
i. "Notice that the letter i is exactly in the middle of the
word," he says. "Notice also that it has a circle over it.
An i with a circle over it is the international symbol for information.
It's a visual symbol we've created. Consumers will come to associate
it with endless inspiration, endless possibility."
Unless, that is, they associate it with
googly eyed teenage girls who dot their i's with hearts and smiley
faces. And indeed, among some companies, a backlash against the naming
companies has taken hold. For some, the fact that they came up with
their names all by themselves, without recourse to professional help,
has become a point of pride. "I love our name," Jeff Mallett,
president and CEO of Yahoo, recently told an industry newsletter.
"It's fun, irreverent and consumer-focused. And it wasn't conjured
up by Landor, or some huge naming agency."
It's this sort of chutzpah
that makes the namers at Landor see red. "The Internet is filled
with arrogance," says Amy Becker coldly. "You might have
a provocative, fun name. But do you have the basis for a lasting brand?
We still don't know how compelling a brand Yahoo will be 10 years
from now. I sense a real missed opportunity."
"Let's put it this way," says
Redhill. "Over the years, we have created and sustained many
of the world's most durable brands. We make a lot more hits than companies
who think up their own symbols and names. I'm not suggesting that
a company couldn't get it right with a stroke of insight or genius
or luck. But if it's your own brand, how can you possibly be objective?
I mean, would you name your own baby?" Redhill thinks for a minute,
then backpedals. "I mean, of course you would name your own baby.
But wouldn't you ask your friends and family for suggestions and recommendations?
Perhaps they would open your eyes to a name you'd never considered."
Redhill is not alone in warning against
the dangers of dilettantism in naming. Other namers are quick to deplore
the proliferation of amateurs -- naming arrivistes who don't know
the difference between denotative and connotative meaning, and who
hilariously confuse brand equity with brand awareness. "A typical
naming process costs about $75,000," says Ron Kapella of Enterprise
IG. "Now, that might sound like a lot of money. But naming is
very difficult and challenging. There are rules to follow. Rules of
linguistics. Rules of trademark. Rules of international corporate
nomenclature ... It's not just a process of pizza and beer around
the table."
In hushed tones, Naseem Javed of ABC Namebank
talks of the seamy underbelly of naming -- of squalid, Dickensian
naming mills operating late into the night. "I've heard of those
outfits," he says. "They've piled up thousands, zillions
of names, which they'll sell for a buck each. For $1,000, they'll
give you a thousand names. But look at the names! It's garbage in
and garbage out." His voice lowers ominously. "Names like
'Oasis' 'Advanta,' 'Advantia,' 'Advantia Plus.' Clients don't realize
how many times those names have been recycled and recycled. Then,
all of a sudden, it's Friday afternoon, and the press release has
to go out on Monday." Apparently unaware of Redhill's description
of the arduous process, culminating in an outburst of mass euphoria,
that generated the name of Hewlett-Packard's new division, he speculates,
"That's how you end up with a name like Agilent."
The naming pros love to trade stories
of shortsighted CEOs who attempt to go it alone before finally turning
to them in humble desperation. "Our system really is a quite
powerful system to make new words out of English," says Ira Bachrach
of NameLab. "We comprehend how identity structure works. We're
creating natural language solutions from a morphemic core ... When
clients try to do it themselves, out of word fragments, they end up
throwing their hands up in disgust. Luckily for us," he adds,
laughing uproariously.
Bachrach recently completed a renaming
project for MacTemps, a specialized talent agency that provides print
production experts who are proficient on Macintosh computers. Bachrach
didn't much care for the name. "It didn't function well,"
he says. "It didn't suggest a brand." Bachrach thought he
could help. "What MacTemps needed," he says, "was a
name that was aggressively novel, shockingly different. A name that
grabbed the perceiver by the throat and shook him."
Bachrach and his team of constructional
linguists rose to the occasion. They presented MacTemps executives
with their recommendation -- Aquent. Aquent? "It doesn't mean
anything," Bachrach cheerfully explains. "But if it did
mean something, it would mean, 'Not a Follower.'"
Bachrach elaborates. "This is a company
that advocates for independent professionals," he says. "They
have asequential career paths ... 'A,' as in 'not,' comes from ancient
Greek. 'Quent' comes from the Latin 'sequor,' meaning, 'to follow.'
These are people who are striking out on their own, charting their
own course."
At MacTemps -- Aquent -- the name change
went into effect last month. Befuddled employees are struggling to
get with the program. "Let's see if I'm explaining this correctly,"
says Nunzio Domellici, an Aquent vice president. "The root of
'sequential' is 'quent.' 'Quent' itself is not a Latin word. But if
it were a Latin word, it would mean, 'follower.' Or 'not a follower.'
They share the same root." Domellici pauses. "Anyway, it's
not something we stress when we pick up the phone."
You could be forgiven for thinking that
a functional, descriptive name such as MacTemps, for all its pedestrian
clunkiness, might be preferable to a name like Aquent, which to the
casual observer evokes something vaguely liquid, perhaps a mouthwash,
and whose meaning only becomes clear, if then, when parsed by a listener
who is profoundly familiar with the morphemic structure of Latin and
ancient Greek. But to the new pros of nomenclature, such quibbles
are irrelevant. To hear Bachrach tell it, he couldn't care less whether
company executives actually like the name he has bestowed upon them.
"We're not really interested in what the client wants,"
he says. "What we do reflects what the client needs. We have
our own analytic system for looking at what the structure of a name
should be, and actually, tend to ignore the client's wishes."
Bachrach is joined in this view by many
of his naming compatriots. Some go so far as to say that it's actually
better if the client doesn't like the name. "We actually prefer
that clients don't fall in love with the name," says Rick Bragdon
of Idiom. "If they fall in love with the name, it's a good sign
there's something wrong with the name."
"By establishing criteria, and by
developing names against those criteria, we've taken the arbitrariness
out of the process," says Ron Kapella of Enterprise IG. "And
so, when a client says, 'I don't like it,' I say, 'It doesn't matter
whether you like it or not. The question is: Does it meet the criteria?'"
In addition to Naviant, Kapella's brag book includes Navistar and
Tempstar, Telegy and Telegent, Verbex and Azurex, Nortel and Meritel.
Despite all the complaints about unlicensed
amateurs, the true threat to great naming may come not from the slapdash
fumblings of anarchic freelancers, but from something close to the
opposite. In their zeal to professionalize and standardize what used
to be a goofy, freewheeling, fly-by-night enterprise, the naming conglomerates
tend to produce names that are reflective not of the client's corporate
culture, but of their own. The result: a slew of names that are sterile,
antiseptic, talcum-powder bland.
To find the soul of the Agilent generation,
you need look no further than Darius Somary, a bright, eager research
director at Landor. Somary is a firm believer in the need to subject
all names to the rigors of quantitative and volumetric research. "The
advantage we see in quantitative research in name testing is that
it yields definite statistical results," he tells me. "It's
easier to pick a winner."
But language, of course, is not digital,
but organic. It comes from that wet, sticky place that we call our
brain. How, I ask Somary, can Landor quantify an emotional response
to a word? Easy, he says. "We set up phone interviews in which
the interviewer has a very clear script to follow. And she can't really
interact outside of that script. The questions are quite straightforward.
She might say something like, 'On a scale of one to 10, how strongly
does the name 'Agilent' communicate the following attributes: 'high
quality,' 'very strong customer focus,' 'adapted to my needs,' 'truly
cares about its customers.'
"Then we look at the results,"
Somary tells me. "We chart it all out. We make name graphs. And
we go back to the client, and we say, 'Here's our winner.'"
Lu Cordova, president of TixToGo.com,
is among the CEOs who roll their eyes at this sort of hubris. "Let's
face it," she says. "We know who's in these big naming companies.
We went to college with some of them. They say they're experts at
this and experts at that. But they're really just our peers. They
don't have any special mystical powers."
Cordova learned this the hard way earlier
this year, when she sought out a new name for TixToGo, a popular online
booking, ticketing and reservations service. After several months
of probing and crunching, the naming firm she'd hired came back with
a strong recommendation: YourThing.com. "The first 10 people
we mentioned it to all said, 'It sounds like your, um, thingy,"
Cordova says drily. "So we said, whoops, OK, that one's gone."
Finished with the naming companies, TixToGo
decided instead to sponsor a contest. Last month, the company picked
a winner, David Nader, from over 128,000 entrants. In return for his
winning submission, "Acteva," Nader received the keys to
a Porsche Boxter. The shy young software engineer was thrilled --
and so was Cordova. "We love the name," she says. "And
we're especially delighted it came from a civilian. The [naming companies]
are unbelievable. I had one guy from a naming firm ask me me how I
expected to get a name from a non-expert. He literally said, 'I charge
$150,000 just to sneeze.' His whole attitude was, 'How could you go
to them when you have me?' The snobbery, the credentialism was incredible."
Cordova casts her decision to snub the
namers in populist terms. "We bet on America, and the bet paid
off," she says. "We spread awareness. We grabbed a lot of
creative names ... The whole thing was tons of fun. What a vindication
of the American population -- to show that they could do it."
For those corporate souls not brave enough
to put their brand in the hands of the American citizenry, another
option is to turn to a renegade naming firm. A Hundred Monkeys, headed
by Danny Altman and Steve Manning, is leading the fight against terminal
blandness in corporate naming. "We don't do names like Agilent,"
Manning tells me. "And so we have to pass on a lot of big contracts.
We'd name a car for GM for free, if they'd just let us do something
cool. Something with some emotional connectivity. It'd be such a fucking
public service."
"No one names a car Mustang or Thunderbird
or Monte Carlo anymore," Altman chimes in. "Instead, you
have Acura. Alero. Xterra. Integra. All thoroughly researched committee
decisions. All emotionally empty ... By the time they've been laundered,
and pressed and packaged there's nothing left."
Altman and Manning, whose clients include
Nickelodeon, Apple and Matchbox toys, are contemptuous of their morpheme-crunching
rivals. "It's like using a computer program to write a song,"
Manning says. "You can do it, but why? Why go there? Why do that?"
They regard their names as organic, throbbing beings, deserving of
courtesy and respect. "I think all the time about the names that
didn't make it," Altman says mournfully. "I think about
what those names would have been like had they lived."
"It's like the names are our foster
children," Altman says eagerly. "We have to give them up
to someone. But we want to make sure they go to a good home. And that
they're going to be used in a good way."
Some would say they love their names a
little too much. "It's like [the names] are these little creative
pearls, and they're casting them before us swine," says one advertising
executive who has worked with the pair. The executive puts down the
phone. "Lorraine," he yells, "what were some of those
names that A Hundred Monkeys kept trying to shove down our throats?
Oh yes. Jamcracker. Calabash. Wallop. Kitamba, which is apparently
some kind of Hindu cloth. Totally inappropriate for our client."
"Who told you about Jamcracker?"
Manning asks. "If you printed that, there would be legal issues.
No one's taken that name yet! That name is our intellectual property."
Later, however, Manning relents and allows me to publish the name.
"There's actually been an issue with Jamcracker," he admits.
It seems that when Altman and Manning
presented the name Jamcracker to a client recently, the reception
was not everything they had hoped for. "I put the name up in
front of their creative people," Manning says. "There were
a couple of women sitting in. One of them got up and said, 'Oh, that's
disgusting.' Another said, 'This is really sick.' I said, 'Excuse
me, what are you talking about?' They said, 'We can't explain it,
but that name is just creeping us out. We don't know what it is, but
could you take it off the wall, please?'" Manning remains mystified
by the incident. "There's apparently some strange, uncomfortable
meaning attached to it in the minds of some women," he says.
"God knows what that could be."
But while the Monkeys' methods aren't
universally popular, some people can't get enough. Satisfied clients
describe their experience as akin to the religious epiphany that follows
an agonizing exile in the desert. "It's not all fun and games
with the Monkeys," says Robin Bahr, marketing director for MedicaLogic,
a health-care Web site. "At the end, you see the light. But early
on, when the primordial soup is still being stirred, there's a lot
of contention. There's fear and trepidation."
"They just kept digging
and digging," says Gary Siefert, the company's director of Internet
services. "There's a Walter Payton confidence about what they
do. They were actively, if not aggressively, challenging our business
model and our thinking. They were asking questions and more questions.
Until they got to the essence of what we do. It was like digging into
a huge watermelon on a summer day, just breaking it down, piece by
piece. They kept drawing us back and back, from the playground of
our inner child to the reality of our business model. It was an almost
mystical experience."
Bahr and Siefert are thrilled with their
Monkey-furnished name -- "98point6." "It's perfect,"
says Bahr. "It's just what we wanted. No Latin roots. No suffixes
of any kind. I mean, these guys are good."
The monkeys don't come cheap. "We
charge $65,000 per name," says Altman. "But we work with
you for a month. And for that month, we are basically yours. It's
actually a much lower price point than many of our competitors."
He's right. What's more, at A Hundred
Monkeys, $65,000 will buy you an entire word. Some rival firms charge
more than that for a mere suffix.
Consider Luxon Cara's $70,000 "identity
program" for US Air. The airline "wanted to be repositioned
and perceived as a major U.S. airline," says John Hudson, Luxon
Cara's president. "And so we researched this. We checked it out
globally. We basically lived with them for nine months to a year.
It was one of the most exciting things we ever did."
Tom Lagow, US Air's executive vice president
of marketing, says it was exciting for him, too. "They did an
extensive amount of research," he says. "A hundred to 150
hours of interviewing. And I'll tell you, I was very impressed. They
peeled the onion back to the point where they were able to define
what business we were in. They determined that we were in the business
of proficiency. And that, very unfortunately, that message of proficiency
was not conveyed by the name US Air."
What was the new name? I asked. And when
would it be unveiled? I was guessing Skystar, Glident, Proficienta.
"Oh, it's already been unveiled," Lagow explains. I was
perplexed. "But isn't US Air still US Air?" I asked. "I
was just in an airport the other day, and I could have sworn ..."
"No, no," Lagow says. "It's
been changed to US Airways."
"That's it?" I asked.
"That's all we needed!" he said
eagerly. "What we found was that airlines that end in 'Air' tend
to be thought of not as major. What we found is that if you stretch
the name a little bit -- don't throw it out, just stretch it a little
bit -- you create the perception of a larger, more substantial airline.
Strategically and structurally, we are now oriented toward the international."
The renaming, which was announced in April
1997, was worth every penny, says Lagow. "We've heard comments
from around the industry that it's one of the best identity programs
ever done," he says.
If $70,000 seems like a hefty price for
a word fragment, consider the chutzpah of Ira Bachrach. Several years
ago, he charged Infiniti $75,000 for a single letter. Or, to be fair,
two letters.
"We wanted to express the idea that
[Infiniti] was a philosophically different kind of car," Bachrach
explains. Proclaiming E, S, Z or X to be yesterday's news, Bachrach
recommended that the company adopt different letters for its model
identifiers. "I told them to use letters that weren't conventional,"
he says, "that were, in fact, aggressively unconventional."
Bachrach decided he was sweet on "q"
and "j." "Utterly unused letters," he says. "Aggressively
novel letters which didn't necessarily parse to luxury and performance.
These were marketing guys with courage."
One model became the Infiniti J30, another
the Q45. "I know it doesn't sound like much," Bachrach admits.
"But I'm prouder of that than anything I've ever done in the
model business. It was a marvelously condensed way to convey something
that would have taken millions of dollars in advertising to convey."
Instead, they scraped by with a mere $37,500 per letter. Lucky Infiniti.
In the end, however, attempting to quantify
the benefits of a naming project may be just as small-minded as, well,
attempting to quantify the benefits of a name. For the lucky client
who truly clicks with his or her namer, the collateral benefits go
far beyond nomenclature. There are new words to learn. Fun games to
play. And, in the case of the Monkeys, unimpeachable warmth and love.
"We got so much more than a name," says Robin Bahr of 98point6.
"I mean, I got a name for my daughter. One of our senior executives
identified strongly with 'Mescalanza.' No one calls him Jim anymore.
His name is Mescalanza." Meanwhile, she says, "our senior
manager for Internet development just fell in love with the name 'Jamcracker.'
And so today, the Harvey meeting is known as the Jamcracker meeting.
There are 300 people at this company who identify Jamcracker with
Harvey."
Bahr claps her hands over her mouth. "Oh
my God," she says. "I forgot. I shouldn't be mentioning
these names to a reporter. Technically, we don't have ownership of
those names. Jamcracker is still the Monkeys' property."
Bahr stops for a moment, as if
listening to herself. Then she bursts out laughing. "Listen,"
she says. "I take it back. You write whatever you want to write.
If someone out there wants to name their company Jamcracker, God bless
them. And good luck to them."
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