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Lessons in Business Naming from Newspaper HeadlinesFree-Reprint Article Written by: Marcia Yudkin See Terms of Reprint Below.We have moved our TERMS OF REPRINT to the end of the article. Be certain to read our TERMS OF REPRINT and honor our TERMS OF REPRINT when you use this article. Thank you. This article has been distributed by: Article-Distribution.com Helpful Link: The Digital Millennium Copyright Act - Overview www.gseis.ucla.edu/iclp/dmca1.htm --------------------------------------------------------------------- Article Title: ============== Lessons in Business Naming from Newspaper Headlines Article Description: ==================== Newspaper headlines often involve enjoyable wordplay - which could easily figure in business names or tag lines as well. By pondering a couple of dozen headlines, I was able to extract four lessons for naming. Additional Article Information: =============================== 538 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line Distribution Date and Time: 2009-06-09 10:48:00 Written By: Marcia Yudkin Copyright: 2009 Contact Email: [email protected] Marcia Yudkin's Picture URL: www.thephantomwriters.com/client-img/marcia-yudkin.jpg For more free-reprint articles by Marcia Yudkin, please visit: www.thePhantomWriters.com/recent/author/marcia-yudkin.html
If you use this article on your website or in your ezine, We Want To Know About It. Use the following URL to let us know where you have used this article, and we will include a link to your website on thePhantomWriters.com: thephantomwriters.com/notify.php?id=6765&p=load HTML Copy-and-Paste and TEXT Copy-and-Paste Versions Of Article Are Available at: thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/db/y/business-naming-lessons.shtml#get_code --------------------------------------------------------------------- Lessons in Business Naming from Newspaper Headlines Copyright (c) 2009 Marcia Yudkin Creative Marketing Solutions www.yudkin.com/ Two headlines in the "Home" section of my local newspaper caught my eye the other day: "Natural floors can be knotty and nice" and "Serving cheese with ease." Both headlines involve enjoyable wordplay of the sort that could easily figure in business names or tag lines. I can imagine "KnottyandNice.com" as the domain name for a wooden items crafts shop, and "Cheese with ease" as the tag line for a cheese lovers' online community. So I went looking for some tips on writing news headlines, thinking they might offer valuable insights for naming, too. After all, news editors need to come up with informative, catchy headers numerous times every workday. Even more challenging, their headers need to fit the available space. They need to be able to condense or stretch an idea's expression, depending on how many columns an article spreads across. My Google search didn't quickly turn up any such tips, though. Maybe headline writing is an art passed on in secret by grizzled, ink-stained veterans during the midnight shift. Nevertheless, by pondering a couple of dozen headlines, I was able to observe several key points. 1. Newspaper headline writers collect short, vivid verbs, such as "mines" ("Obama mines small, red states"), "stirs," "pushes," "clings," "set," "edges," "sparks," "tosses," "sees," "OKs" and much more. Not only can headlines with verbs tell a complete story, they convey energy. Because verbs are frequently overlooked as an element in naming, these punchy little words can help you come up with a trademarkable name or a free domain in a competitive industry. 2. Long, vivid words can also come in handy. In the headline "Super Bowl party can be gastronomical success," the word "gastronomical" rescues the line from dullness. It's a wonderful word that could be tweaked in a zillion creative ways for a company name or tag line. The lesson: long, vivid words can help you convey a complicated idea concisely, as long as your average customer has an inkling of their meaning. 3. Short, vivid words come in useful, too. Take a look at the word "ire" in the headline "Delay in polar bear decision draws ire of Senate." This is another kind of word that most people understand yet probably wouldn't think to use. 4. Combined cleverly, ordinary words can please inordinately. Besides the rhyme in "cheese with ease" and the homonym in "knotty and nice," I also found "Hoops and hollers" atop a photo of kids cheering at a basketball game, which illustrates alliteration - the repetition of initial letters or sounds. Another headline, "Bush comes clean with former addicts," used an expression with two meanings that both tie in with the subject matter - George W. Bush talking openly about his former drinking problem. All in all, your newspaper can serve as a source of instruction and inspiration for naming. Just make sure you screen out bloopers like these, which have actually appeared in newspapers: * Blind Woman Gets New Kidney from Dad she Hasn't Seen in Years * Grandmother of Eight Makes Hole in One * Quarter of a Million Chinese Live on Water * Stolen Painting Found by Tree * Squad Helps Dog Bite Victim * Red Tape Holds Up New Bridges * Iraqi Head Seeks Arms * Kids Make Nutritious Snacks
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