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analysis Brand Names Including Animals - A Look At The Data

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Many great brand names have been built around animals, such as Puma, Jaguar, RedBull, FireFox, DuckDuckGo and many others. The animal provides a concrete image on which to build the logo and brand. Many times some aspect off the name hints at characteristics of the brand. Foxes are known to be agile, speedy and possibly sly, applicable to web browsing. The bull is known for strength and stamina, relevant to RedBull products.

In 2019 James Iles took a look at how animal names are used. He summarizes the case this way:
Animal domain names are versatile brands, and this may explain why they are so popular as investments. Animal names aren't pigeonholed into specific industries, verticals or company types, and the array of companies using them proves that.

In this article I look at some tools you can use to determine relative popularity of different animals. You can readily use these tools to do investigations on animal names of interest to you.

Common Animal Names Used In Brands

Primary Names started a basic list of popular animals in 2018, extended by others since that time. The list contains names such as fox, bull, bear, cat, dog, dove, falcon, panda, lion, tiger, owl and shark.

A Look At Sales Data

You can use NameBio to readily find sales including animal names by using the Niche category and then Animals as subcategory.

The top sales are in fly.com that sold three times, for $2.89, $1.76 and $1.50 million. While a fly is definitely an animal, it also has other meanings. Similarly land.com, impala.com and mara.com are on animal list, although most probably don’t first associate them with animal names.

After excluding these types of names, here is a list of animal names with NameBio-recorded sales at $15,000 or more. Animal is used in the biological sense, including birds, insects, marine life, etc. If you want the complete list of all animal sales, here is the NameBio link.
  1. gorilla.com, $496,320 (2019)
  2. bird.com, $200,000 (2005)
  3. snake.com, $135,000 (2019)
  4. crab.com, $92,000 (2008)
  5. coyote.com, $63,000 (2011)
  6. crow.com, $48,300 (2007)
  7. dolphin.co, $48,000 (2012)
  8. coyotte.org, $45,000 (2014)
  9. crocodile.com, $45,000 (2008)
  10. bedbug.com, $40,000 (2008)
  11. impala.com, $30,000 (2017)
  12. tiger.io, $28,888 (2020)
  13. badger.com, $27,400 (2011)
  14. monkey.co.uk, $22,400 (2012)
  15. buck.co, $19,888 (2019)
  16. fox.net, $19,000 (2007)
  17. possum.com, $18,250 (2012)
  18. PolarBear.org, $17,825 (2011)
  19. dog.de, $15,935 (2006)
  20. BlackBuck.com, $15,000 (2015)
  21. dog.net, $15,000 (2005)
I was surprised that many of the more desired animal names are not in the sales list. Some are in use and were sold privately. Another reason, though, is that many superb animal names remain in domain investor hands, waiting for the right buyer. Keep in mind that NameBio does not include sales from the brandable marketplaces.

I also looked at some extensions other than .com.
  • There were 25 .org sales with a total dollar volume of $90,000, half coming from the dolphin.org sale.
  • A total of 52 .net sales, accounting for $138,500.
  • The .io extension has 33 animal-related sales for $88,600. The tiger.io sale last year accounted for almost one-third of the total.
  • There were 31 .co sales, with $138,800 total. $48,000 of that came from the dolphin.co sale.
  • While there were 40 new extension animal sales, $90,100 total, the highest was $10,000 for ox.club that sold this month.
  • The .ai extension has sold 38 times in animal names for $31,900, although none are over $5000 yet.
Popularity Of Animals In Company Names

I had a look at how often animal names are used in business and organization names using the OpenCorporates database. I included only names from active listings. Some animals are difficult, for example bear may be used in contexts that are unrelated to the animal name, and searching for ox will be dominated by alternative meanings in longer words. The results below indicate that most animal names find use in hundreds of business names, and that dog, bear, fox and cat are all very popular.

GraphOpenCorporate.png


Keep in mind that the OpenCorporates directory lists both businesses and organizations, and some of these are nonprofit organizations. OpenCorporates data can be sorted by industry classification. For example, it is possible to determine if a particular animal finds use in names for retail or wholesale trade, finance, or the construction industry.

Popularity Of Animals In BrandBucket Listings

Another way to gauge popularity is to look at how many names are based on a certain animal in popular brandable marketplaces. You can use the Refine search on BrandBucket to do this by then selecting Contains rather than the default broad search. Keep in mind that even doing that will not eliminate all names unrelated to the animal. For example, FlowLoad includes the word owl, but is not inspired by the word owl.

GraphBrandBucket.png


At BrandBucket names including owl, rabbit and fox are particularly popular.

It seemed to me that names well known only in certain regions don’t appear often on BrandBucket. For example moose and beaver are both well known animals in Canada, and some other countries, and they are used in 6455 and 8237 business names on OpenCorporates. However, on BrandBucket there are just 7 names with moose and 1 with beaver.

Popularity Of Animals At SquadHelp

One can’t readily do searches at SquadHelp that exactly includes a term. SquadHelp searches include domain names that are inspired or broadly similar. For example, a full SquadHelp search on duck yields 505 listings, but only 36 actually contained the word duck on the day I searched. Here are the results of my hand-checked searches at SquadHelp on some of the more popular animal names, including only listings with that animal name.

GraphSquadHelp.png


Chinese Zodiac Animals

I have wondered if the animals of the Chinese zodiac, rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, goat, monkey, rooster, dog and pig, get a boost in use as business names. We are currently in the year of the ox, which will be followed by tiger, rabbit and dragon. All of these are attractive branding names for other reasons, and it will be interesting to see if there are more sales in these names.

Animal Brand Meanings

I found this article helpful in suggesting animal symbolism in logo design and branding. Here is an example of the sort of information offered:
The deer family has mythological ties back to ancient Greece when the goddess Artemis considered the deer to be sacred. The symbolism of deer plays to the heart of their natural environment. Deer represent energy, independence, and regeneration as well as the gentle, yet enticing lure that can come from starting a new adventure. Logos that have a deer or stag as a focus may be trying to capitalize on that independence or sense of adventure.

Final Thoughts

James Iles wrote an interesting article Animals All The Rage in 2018 that covered both acquisitions and a selection of recent sales.

As well as the tools indicated earlier, a simple Google search can give you a feeling for how different animal names are used. Searching trademark databases are another way to gauge interest in a name, as well as to make sure your proposed acquisition is not infringing. One can research trademarks at Trademark247 or at the USPTO, among other places.

Not infrequently, two-word domain names combine a color with an animal, such as RedBull. Sometimes this is an obvious pairing, like BlueBird, while other times it is an unnatural, but memorable, combination, such as PinkElephant.

I hope users will comment on what animals they think make particularly strong brands. While please don’t post your entire set of animal names, it would be appropriate, if readers desire, to post the one favourite animal domain name you currently hold.


Thanks to NameBio, OpenCorporates, BrandBucket and SquadHelp for databases that were used for this research.
 
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The views expressed on this page by users and staff are their own, not those of NamePros.
thank so much for the list, I added some names to my collection
 
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They are missing some popular ones in those lists that is for sure like whale, beast, chimp, bunny, lion. Maybe its the domainers who like those 🙃
 
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"I was surprised that many of the more desired animal names are not in the sales list. Some are in use and were sold privately. Another reason, though, is that many superb animal names remain in domain investor hands, waiting for the right buyer."

@Bob Hawkes ,

Thanks for another great article,

The sentence in bold above from your article made me wonder why is it that some of these domains are still in the hands of investors 20 to 30 years after .com domain names and the Internet in general have entered the commercial scene.

And that question is not only for some of the top Animal domains that still remain unused, but rather more in regards to all the category defining .coms that are still waiting to be sold.

Is it because that the investors are asking too much for these domains or could it be that they belong to collectors who are reluctant to sell them at any price, but one can only wonder why these top domains are still being left unused.

It would be understandable for some of the other extensions to be kept until they mature, but one would think that almost all the top .com domains should have been in the hands of the end users by now and so it begs the question as to why is it that they aren't, and how many more years are some of the top .com domains going to remain unused in the hands of the investors specially now that some of the other extensions are gaining traction too.

IMO
 
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I am surprised that BEE didn't make it to your list as it's an animal that is quite popular in branding. Even Open Corporates has over 40000+ companies listed with that keyword (no filters applied).
Thanks for your input and I absolutely agree that bee is a highly sought keyword. It was in the hand written list of ten or so that I had planned to start with. It seemed more complex than some others in trying to root out unrelated words, even approximately, due to the popularity of words beginnng with bee, be+E___ terms, etc.

A few comments.
  1. The names I present above are NOT the most popular animal names. It is not that I studied 2000 possibilities and these were top. My goal was to show demonstrative results for some widely used animal names, and present the tools that readers could use to analyze any particular animal names they want. So please everyone, do not interpret that any animal not on above lists are not popular - it simply means that I did not study and present that name.
  2. But with all the interest in bee, I did do the best I could with it. Here are the results. OpenCorporates have 22,468 active listings (and just over 41,000 if you could businesses no longer in operation). There are 258 bee listings on SquadHelp (I went through by hand to isolate just those actually including bee). With BrandBucket I both did the contains, and also went through list deciding myself which were relevant. Surprisingly, in this one case I got a higher number on my list, 159 listings.
  3. On NameBio there are 5 exact sales for bee, 141 with bee as prefix, and 192 as suffix. This is one example important to use prefix rather than starts with. For example starts with would include words like beer or multiple word expressions like BeExcellent.
  4. Bee is a nice word to use in a brand, probably one of the best. :xf.smile: My apologies for not including it.
Thanks everyone for your input, comments and names!

Bob
 
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Fanciful brands like these animal names seem to be hard ones to develop and depend on, at least on the part of big companies. Small businesses are much more likely to take the leap, but the expense of a single-word name is vast, so they would almost certainly choose a 2-word domain instead. They seem to choose a modifying word that not a color, though. More useful to use a word related to what they do, like MailChimp.

An early animal name we sold was KittenRobot.com. Sometimes robots and animals have the same appeal as brands, since robots are so often made in the image of animals (& bugs): robotdog, robotcockroach. And I notice the number of sales for animal domains is just about the same as for our robot category.
 
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Thanks for this very interesting and informative article. I feel we should have articles on Metal, Elements, Gemstones.....too.
Thank You once again.
 
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Thanks Bob.

Animals have been a stalwart of how we represent ourselves since time immemorial, and I think will continue to be so far into the future regardless of technology base or lack of. It's amazing the relevance we hold to them, even as humans being at the top of the food chain.

I find with any domain in any ecosystem, animal domains are quick to be the first snatched up.

Cheers.
 
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Thanks Bob.

Animals have been a stalwart of how we represent ourselves since time immemorial, and I think will continue to be so far into the future regardless of technology base or lack of. It's amazing the relevance we hold to them, even as humans being at the top of the food chain.

I find with any domain in any ecosystem, animal domains are quick to be the first snatched up.

Cheers.
Considering we are mammals and evolved from reptiles - makes sense
 
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Thank you for the article.

cat .com is one of the best animal domains... unfortunately it's used by Caterpillar company and not related really to cats.
 
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Considering we are mammals and evolved from reptiles - makes sense
I thought it was fish..

Crocodile Dundee, classic branding (nostalgic .com since 99'):

tsVvjro.jpg
 
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Pink and blue animals (not the colours together that is) seem to be the most popular with PinkDragon.com and BlueRaven.com being registered in multiple extensions.

Good luck finding any other available .com creature domains in these colours.
 
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So please everyone, do not interpret that any animal not on above lists are not popular - it simply means that I did not study and present that name.

Bob


There are also names that are more directly related to animals like fangs, claws, tails, fur, horns, hooves, antlers, shell, scales, feathers, fins, flippers, gills, quills, wings, whiskers, wool, egg, tusks, trunks, beak, paws ...

And others that are somewhat related to them like nest, web, soar, swarms, venom, armor, leather, blubber, pouch, hive, milk, pearl, silk, ivory ....

IMO
 
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Nice post @Bob Hawkes

I love animal domain names and have sold quite a few over the years. In fact, one of my very first sales was FoxPaw.com which I sold for $3,500

I just did a quick "Sold" export in my Efty account to get all the animal names I've sold to end-users so far.

Komodo-ai $3,995
Foxpaw-com $3,500
LionCub-com $2,995
CareerShark-com $2,995
SchoolPanda-com $2,990 (I am sure @equity78 remembers this one!)
ShowCat-com $2,650
StatShark-com $2,495
StartFox-com $1,795
RetroBee-com $1,795
BlackSheep-io $1,700
TheGoat.co $1,495
InsuranceCat.com $1,175
Catlandia.com $9,80
 
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Doron's sold a good bunch of these, certainly. I had to go back years to find our animal sales, because they didn't happen often, despite how much I like this type of name myself. All in .com -

FeedCat
RobotKitten
SteelPig
HornyBirds
ViperNews
SnakeTrader
SuperPussy
HardMule
 
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Just saw in another thread tadassilverfox posted his Dan portfolio, and the animal names jump out. Some interesting ones there.
 
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Guys whats your thoughts about Alligaters.com
 
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No Alligators.com worth $xx,xxx

i mean with er on the end :)

For misspelled names, best to submit to BrandBucket, Squadhelp, Namerific and Alter and see whether it gets accepted in any of those places.
 
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I'm surprised lions didn't make the list.
 
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I had animal in my last dinner ;)
 
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Best report I ever saw with so much details in ot.
Thank you Bob for such an elaborate report.
 
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