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Understanding Connotations in Tag Lines, Business Names and Monikers

Article Description:
====================

Discover a simple secret for preventing communication disasters
in company names or product names. Instead of fighting what words
mean to your audience, you can increase your ability to nail a
thought or idea in powerful names, sentences, nicknames or
slogans.


Additional Article Information:
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523 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2009-07-07 11:12:00

Written By:     Marcia Yudkin
Copyright:      2009
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]


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Understanding Connotations in Tag Lines, Business Names and Monikers
Copyright (c) 2009 Marcia Yudkin
Creative Marketing Solutions
http://www.yudkin.com/



The following closer on an email was meant to clinch my interest
in an information product, but it did the opposite:

"I would love for you to experience the same kind of worldwide
notoriety my clients have enjoyed for years."

As a professional word person, I knew instantly that this expert
had overlooked the negative meaning of "notoriety." But before
jumping on her mistake, I checked my authoritative sources -
dictionaries.

For "notorious," the American Heritage dictionary provides the
definition "known widely and usually unfavorably," while the
American College Dictionary has as a first definition "widely
but unfavorably known." As synonyms for "notoriety,"
dictionary.com offers "disrepute, ill-repute, shame, infamy."

For certain audiences, especially those that are young, edgy or
avant-garde, one can turn established meanings upside down to
create a magnetic message. It's easy to imagine rock bands,
movie stars or political activists for whom "notoriety"
glitters as a goal.

But clearly this expert did not intend to claim that she helps
her clients achieve an unfavorable worldwide reputation or to be
held in widespread disrepute. And just as clearly, the fact that
she misused this word implies she can't be trusted to formulate
a winning message for someone seeking acclaim.

Blunders like this can turn up in company or product names, tag
lines, monikers (clever nicknames) and in marketing copy.

Very often, people crafting a marketing piece get tired of using
the obvious words for their situation and reach for synonyms. To
avoid writing "fame" - a simple, direct and ordinary word -
this expert used (actually, misused) the more complex word
"notoriety." People also get tripped up by connotation when
they fall in love with the way something sounds.

For instance, I once thought up the moniker "Grand Poohbah of
Publicity. " I loved its combination of sounds. However, when I
looked it up, I discovered definitions like this one, in the Free
Online Dictionary: "A pompous ostentatious official, especially
one who, holding many offices, fulfills none of them."
"Poohbah" comes from Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera, The
Mikado, where Pooh-Bah was a haughty character who held the
offices Lord Chief Justice, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Master
of the Buckhounds, Lord High Auditor, Groom of the Back Stairs,
and Lord High Everything Else. Oops, I certainly do not want to
come across that way!

Whether you rely on memory or use a thesaurus to jog your
consideration of related words, you must always, always take one
more step and look up the official meaning of fancier or less
common words. If you are aiming at a positive message and you see
a negative connotation in any of the definitions, that indicates
a high risk of an unintended negative message.

Even if several definitions are positive, one negative definition
spoils the word's potential, the same way one rotten tomato
mixed with fresh ones ruins a sauce.

The discipline of looking up words not only prevents
communication disasters, over time it increases your command of
the language. Instead of fighting what words mean to your
audience, you increase your ability to nail a thought or idea in
powerful names, sentences, nicknames or slogans. 




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Marcia Yudkin is Head Stork of Named At Last, a company that 
brainstorms creative business names, product names and tag lines 
for clients.  For a systematic process of coming up with an 
appealing and effective name or tag line, download a free copy of
"19 Steps to the Perfect Company Name, Product Name or Tag Line" 
at http://www.namedatlast.com/19steps.htm


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