Borrowed narrative Naming

What is Borrowed narrative naming anyway?

Why invent a story when you can borrow one that's already powerful? Instead of calling your brand 'FastDelivery' (boring), you name it after Hermes, the messenger god, and suddenly people think about speed, reliability, and mythology. That's borrowed narrative naming.

Borrowed narratives lift from literature, mythology, or real-world figures that already have weight. When someone hears 'Hermes,' they don't think about your brand first — they think about the god, the stories, the archetypal power. That borrowed weight is why this naming technique works so damn well for brands that want to communicate depth and meaning without building it from scratch.

Why do borrowed narratives work so well in naming?

Borrowed narratives come with built-in stories. They have history, meaning, and emotional weight that you don't have to create. When done right, they create instant recognition, depth, and names that feel significant because they're connected to something bigger. When done wrong? You get a name that feels pretentious or disconnected from your brand.

The trick is picking narratives that actually fit. Not just random mythology, but stories that match what you stand for. Hermes works for delivery because he was the messenger god. Others work for different reasons. That's the difference between strategic narrative borrowing and random mythology in naming.

Real-World Examples

Hermes
Named after the messenger god. Perfect for delivery and speed.
Nike
Named after the goddess of victory. Perfect for sports and triumph.
Amazon
Named after warrior women. Suggests power and scale.
Athena
Named after the goddess of wisdom. Perfect for intelligence and strategy.
Apollo
Named after the god of light and music. Used by various brands for innovation.
Odin
Named after the all-father god. Suggests wisdom and power.
Atlas
Named after the titan who holds the world. Perfect for strength and support.
Pandora
Named after the first woman in Greek myth. Used for discovery and curiosity.

When should you use Borrowed narrative naming for your brand name or product name?

Comes with built-in stories — instant depth and meaning

Creates emotional weight — narratives have archetypal power

Works globally if narrative is universal — mythology travels

Allows for rich brand storytelling

When should you avoid Borrowed narrative naming for your brand name or product name?

Can feel pretentious if narrative doesn't fit brand

Might confuse if narrative isn't well-known

Less flexible than abstract names if your brand changes

Step by step guide

How to use Borrowed narrative in naming?

1.

Figure out if a borrowed narrative actually fits your brand.

Not every company needs mythology. If you can't find a good match, maybe skip this route.

2.

Selfstorm narratives that match your brand story.

Use Selfstorm's naming creative session to explore options. What myths, stories, or figures match your brand?

3.

Test if the narrative resonates.

Good borrowed narratives create instant connection. If people don't know the story, it won't work. Show someone your name. Do they get the narrative?

4.

Make sure it's not too obscure.

Borrowed narratives need to be known enough to work. If it's too niche, try again.

5.

Check for negative associations.

Does your narrative accidentally mean something bad? Does it remind people of something negative? Do your homework.

6.

Plan how you'll honor the narrative.

Borrowed narratives need respect. How will you live up to the story? If you can't answer this, reconsider.

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