When it comes to your agency new business, credibility matters. Will your oddball agency name be perceived as fresh and clever? Wacky agency names have been a “thing” for a while...they are no longer cutting edge. Now its more like jumping on the bandwagon. And if you have one, you better be confident you can make it work for you. Pink Monkey Data Gophers? You better have the chops to pull that name off, if you want to be taken seriously.
Sure, we can point to a laundry list of agencies who have been able to make their quirky, outside-of-the-box names work well for them. But even among the most successful of them, you can bet G&M Plumbing is constantly fielding pesky calls from people looking for a plumber. Kowloon Wholesale Seafood Co. changed their name to Secret Weapon Marketing after confusion over their line of business. And Ian Cohen of Wexley School for Girls has said (in Adweek) that their agency’s name has both fascinated and alienated potential clients.
You may have seen AdAge.com’s Agency Name Generator (whose formula seems to be roughly: Adjective + Optional and Possibly Redundant Second Adjective + Animal, Plant, or Random Object).
I tried it a few times and here’s what I got:
There’s a very similar Silly Agency Name Generator at Copify.com, which yields such gems as:
A while back, I spoke with an agency whose name easily could have been spawned by either of those generators. In this case, the agency was a younger organization with not a lot of experience under their belt. Their name made them sound even younger.
The problem was that their agency sort of sounded like a joke, and if you sound like a joke, how are you going to get through to the C-suite? Sure, if you are a known quantity with a proven track record, you may be able to get away with abnormal naming antics and still come off sounding clever. But it isn’t going to work for everyone.
Whenever you are selling something—and like it or not, agencies are selling something—you have to demonstrate you know your target audience and how to speak to them. Especially the decision makers. So think long and hard before calling your agency a nonsense name like Bucktooth Pickle Gorilla.
I recently did a Google search for “bad agency names,” and one of the results was McBad Creative. Naturally, I was curious. A quick look revealed the agency heads weren’t named “McBad.” Their “About” page told no interesting story. I was left wondering if they were, like the Run DMC song, “not bad meaning bad, but bad meaning good.”
Luckily, they had a chat option where I typed my query and was told that “M.C.B.A.D. stands for the initials of our pets’ last names,” because they “wanted to choose a name that meant something and also involved our four-legged family members.” (Oh. Okay…). I asked them if they had ever found that their agency’s name had helped or hurt their new business efforts and they said it helped more than anything, and are going stronger than ever. So there you go. It seems like they might do more to capitalize on the name, but it's hard to knock something if it’s working. And they also said they were in the process of re-doing their website.
Naming your agency offers an opportunity to advertise your branding brilliance. Ideally, the name will make some sense upon inspection, or offer up the opportunity to tell a great story. But your agency’s name is never going to drive itself.
Ultimately, whether the agency’s name could be seen as boring (BBDO, DDB, etc.) or goofy (The Wexley School for Girls, 72andSunny, etc.), it comes down to whether their work stands up. If it does, any perceived drawbacks of their “boring” or “unconventional” agency name becomes unimportant.
It also stands to reason that if your agency’s work is less able to stand on its own, a nontraditional name might further hurt your ability to be taken seriously when it comes to new business. So if your agency is anything less than full-on awesome, you might give greater consideration to a conservative (or at least middle-of-the-road) approach.
If you want to avoid being either too boring or too unconventional, how should you name your agency? According to Entrepreneur, “A professional naming firm may charge as much as $80,000 to develop a name.” But you're an agency, you can DIY, right? Riiight?? It’s difficult to justify that investment when so many other agencies (for better or worse) admit to having picked their names through a basically random process. And you have to wonder whether professional naming firms (like Igor and A Hundred Monkeys) will yield substantially different results, based on their own names. (Just saying).
*(Most of these were loosely adapted from Phil Davis on Entrepreneur.com and Entrepreneur.com here; check them out for additional information).
Let’s be realistic, though. For many agencies, the “laws of naming” are but amusements. All I’m saying is this: before you rebrand as the Bendy Elastic Binder Company, don't underestimate the potential downsides of your agency’s chosen name.
Before I wrap up, I have to mention this cool infographic from Rob and Joe at CargoCollective.com. Published a few years back, it breaks down the ways agencies have named themselves into seven different categories: Founders, Alpha-Numeric, Places, Inanimate Objects, Living Things, Physical or Metaphysical Attributes, and Abstract Concepts. Check it out for additional ideas and approaches to agency names.
Image credits: Too Cool Image: © iStock/ponomarencko; Unique Agency Names Graphic: © iStock/RichVintage (modified); B1G1 Pants Image: © Mark Duval.