Emotional Naming

What is Emotional naming anyway?

Why describe what you do when you can describe how it feels? Instead of calling your brand 'CalmApp' (obvious), you call it 'Calm' and suddenly people feel the emotion before they understand the product. That's emotional naming.

Emotional names tap into human feelings directly. When someone hears 'Calm,' they don't think about meditation apps — they think about the feeling: peace, relaxation, tranquility. That direct emotional connection is why this naming technique works so damn well for brands that want to communicate feeling over function.

Why do emotional names work so well in naming?

Emotions are universal. Everyone knows what calm feels like. Everyone understands what joy means. When done right, emotional names create instant connection, memorability, and names that stick because they're linked to feelings, not just products. When done wrong? You get a name that feels generic or doesn't resonate.

The trick is picking emotions that actually match your brand. Not just random feelings, but emotions that represent what you deliver. Calm works for meditation. Bliss works for happiness. That's the difference between strategic emotional naming and random feeling words in naming.

Real-World Examples

Calm
The emotion is the name. Perfect for meditation and relaxation.
Bliss
Pure happiness. Perfect for wellness and joy.
Innocent
Purity and simplicity. Perfect for natural products.
Joy
Happiness and delight. Used by various brands for positive feeling.
Serenity
Peace and calm. Perfect for wellness brands.
Harmony
Balance and peace. Perfect for lifestyle brands.
Vitality
Energy and life. Perfect for health brands.
Tranquility
Peace and calm. Perfect for spa and wellness.

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

Creates instant emotional connection — feelings are universal

Highly memorable — emotions stick in memory

Works well for lifestyle and wellness brands

Allows for rich brand storytelling

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

Can feel generic if emotion is too common

Might limit brand evolution if emotion is too specific

Less distinctive than abstract names

Step by step guide

How to use Emotional in naming?

1.

Figure out what emotion actually represents your brand.

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

2.

Selfstorm emotions that match your brand feeling.

Use Selfstorm's naming creative session to explore options. What emotion? What feeling? What resonates?

3.

Test if the emotion resonates.

Good emotional names create connection. If people don't feel it, it won't work. Show someone your name. Do they feel the emotion?

4.

Make sure it's not too generic.

Emotional doesn't mean boring. If it feels like everyone else, try again.

5.

Check for negative associations.

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

6.

Plan how you'll live the emotion.

Emotional names need consistent expression. How will you embody the emotion in everything you do? If you can't answer this, reconsider.

Get brand or product/service names inspiration and generate names using 60+ techniques in Selfstorm's creative session.

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