Tuesday, 3 September 2019

Four Things The Simpsons Can Teach Us About Brand Naming

The Simpsons can teach us everything we need to know

Like most kids who grew up in the 90’s, I was raised by The Simpsons. I watched it every Sunday. I watched every re-run. And I even have the first five seasons on DVD.

That funny yellow family taught me so many lessons, and this hit home for me over the weekend. I’m writing a new keynote for the launch of my new book, Brand New Name. (If you’re in the Toronto-area on October 15th, I hope you can attend the launch event. Tickets are available now.)

Brand New Name Book Launch

I was poking around YouTube looking for the perfect clip to add to my talk. I found what I was looking for in three minutes, but I then managed to kill another hour giggling away.

It dawned on me: The Simpsons can teach us a lot about brand naming.

1. Your First Ideas Usually Suck

In “Das Bus”, Homer starts his own internet business, Compu-Global-Hyper-Mega-Net. It’s never revealed what the company actually does, but it does catch the attention of Bill Gates.

Watch how Homer generates names for his fledgling business. They are all obvious and cliché. This happens all too often. You rarely come up with a great idea in the first round of brainstorming. It takes time.

This is why I spread out the naming sprint in Brand New Name over 5 days. By asking participants to generate “5 good names per day for 5 days” helps them to get beyond the obvious and cliché.

2. Say It Out Loud

I am pretty sure I have the humor of a twelve year old, but I can’t help myself. I find it hilarious.

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