Treat your brand name like infrastructure
Most technology companies treat brand or product names like marketing. That’s a mistake. Names are infrastructure—not cosmetic choices or launch-day deliverables. When names are wrong, everything b...
Source: www.fastcompany.com
Most technology companies treat brand or product names like marketing. That’s a mistake. Names are infrastructure—not cosmetic choices or launch-day deliverables. When names are wrong, everything built on top of them pays a quiet, compounding price. We tend to think of infrastructure as physical or technical systems: roads, power grids, cloud platforms. But infrastructure is really something more precise: It’s the invisible system that enables everything else to function. When it works, no one notices. When it doesn’t, nothing scales. Language behaves the same way. Before anyone buys a new technology, it must be named. Before they adopt it, they must talk about it. Before it spreads, it must be searchable, repeatable, explainable, andtrustable. All of that happens in language. Tech companies often come to us for help. We work best before a new technology enters the world. Our role isn’t to hype it or decorate it. It’s to build the language that allows the technology to be understood, a