- Impact
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Domain Name: grandgrant.com
Registrar: Ascio
Expiration Date: 28/04/2016
Paymant: PayPal
Price: PM me your offer
When naming anything - project, product, company or any other business, one of the most important
branding criteria is memorability – the likelihood that a customer will retain and recall the
business name. The more “sticky” the brand name, the greater the recall.
Domain's name should be seen in the same field of view. Whatever is to be named, for example a
small pencil product, it's got its potential to rise up when a proper technique is used in the
naming process.
One of the great pattern that branding experts mention in relation to good business names is
memorability. One of the stickiest techniques in naming is the use of alliteration (both words
starting with the same letter.) It seems the human brain enjoys this linguistic treat, evidenced by
the fact that so many of today’s most famous brands make use of it. Here are just a few examples…
Best Buy
Coca-Cola
Dunkin’ Donuts
Blackberry
LifeLock
Constant Contact
PayPal
Grand Grant is an alliteration with the greatest potential a brand name can offer. Creatively
constructed, without being silly, it clearly evokes a positive experience. The same when Jeff Bezos
decided to call his new online retailer Amazon, he knew that was synonymous with enormous.
Customers get it! The meaning is right there!
"The best single word is the one that contains thousand words."
There's a storytelling, the background and inspiration in it. Its homophonic shape
makes it not only sound catchy and famous, but it's also visually evocative to aid in memory. It's
much easier for your customers to remember a name that conjures up a memorable image in their minds
than one that is tied to a random acronym or unfamiliar name. Examples include Irish Spring soap
and Range Rover SUVs.
Grand Grant awaits for the owner, for its rising, to be put it into the market-field, where the
implications for identity, messaging, advertising, promotions, nomenclature, design and so on, wait
for their startup.
Registrar: Ascio
Expiration Date: 28/04/2016
Paymant: PayPal
Price: PM me your offer
When naming anything - project, product, company or any other business, one of the most important
branding criteria is memorability – the likelihood that a customer will retain and recall the
business name. The more “sticky” the brand name, the greater the recall.
Domain's name should be seen in the same field of view. Whatever is to be named, for example a
small pencil product, it's got its potential to rise up when a proper technique is used in the
naming process.
One of the great pattern that branding experts mention in relation to good business names is
memorability. One of the stickiest techniques in naming is the use of alliteration (both words
starting with the same letter.) It seems the human brain enjoys this linguistic treat, evidenced by
the fact that so many of today’s most famous brands make use of it. Here are just a few examples…
Best Buy
Coca-Cola
Dunkin’ Donuts
Blackberry
LifeLock
Constant Contact
PayPal
Grand Grant is an alliteration with the greatest potential a brand name can offer. Creatively
constructed, without being silly, it clearly evokes a positive experience. The same when Jeff Bezos
decided to call his new online retailer Amazon, he knew that was synonymous with enormous.
Customers get it! The meaning is right there!
"The best single word is the one that contains thousand words."
There's a storytelling, the background and inspiration in it. Its homophonic shape
makes it not only sound catchy and famous, but it's also visually evocative to aid in memory. It's
much easier for your customers to remember a name that conjures up a memorable image in their minds
than one that is tied to a random acronym or unfamiliar name. Examples include Irish Spring soap
and Range Rover SUVs.
Grand Grant awaits for the owner, for its rising, to be put it into the market-field, where the
implications for identity, messaging, advertising, promotions, nomenclature, design and so on, wait
for their startup.
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