Storyline mapping Naming

What is Storyline mapping naming anyway?

Why use a name when you can use a story title? Instead of calling your platform 'RoomRental' (boring), you treat the name as the title of a story: 'Airbnb' — air, bed, breakfast, travel. That's storyline mapping naming.

Storyline mapping treats the name as the title of a story. What's the plot? Who's the protagonist? When someone hears 'Airbnb,' they don't think about just the platform — they think about the story: travel, belonging, experience. That narrative connection is why this naming technique works so damn well for brands that want to communicate through storytelling.

Why does storyline mapping work so well in naming?

Storyline mapping creates narrative. When you treat names as story titles, you create something that feels meaningful. When done right, they create instant connection, depth, and names that stick because they're linked to stories, not just words. When done wrong? You get a name that's too abstract or doesn't make sense.

The trick is mapping stories that actually enhance your brand. Not just random narratives, but plots that represent what you deliver. Airbnb works because it tells the story of travel and belonging. Others work for different reasons. That's the difference between strategic storyline mapping and random story picking in naming.

Real-World Examples

Airbnb
Story of air, bed, breakfast, travel.
LinkedIn
Story of professional connection.
PayPal
Story of friendly payment.
Dropbox
Story of storage and sharing.
Shopify
Story of easy commerce.
Netflix
Story of streaming entertainment.
Spotify
Story of music discovery.
Uber
Story of elevation and transportation.

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

Creates narrative — story titles feel meaningful

Highly memorable — stories stick in memory

Works well for experience-based brands

Allows for rich brand storytelling

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

Can be too abstract if story isn't clear

Might require explanation if narrative isn't obvious

Less clear than descriptive names

Step by step guide

How to use Storyline mapping in naming?

1.

Figure out what story actually represents your brand.

Not every company needs a narrative. If you want clarity, maybe skip this route.

2.

Selfstorm story titles that match your brand.

Use Selfstorm's naming creative session to explore options. What's the plot? Who's the protagonist? What story?

3.

Test if the story works.

Good storyline mapping creates connection. If people don't get the story, it won't stick. Show someone your name. Do they get the narrative?

4.

Make sure it's not too abstract.

Storyline mapping should enhance, not confuse. If it's too vague, try again.

5.

Check for negative associations.

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

6.

Plan how you'll tell the story.

Storyline mapping names need consistent expression. How will you live the story 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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