A Free-Reprint Article Written by: Marcia Yudkin 

Article Title: 
Four Warnings Regarding a Foreign-Sounding (or Foreign-Looking) New Business 
Name

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Article Description:
Foreign names for companies or products sometimes do very
well in the American market. We also see plenty of
pseudo-foreign names - created by misapplying spelling
patterns found in foreign languages. Use my four-point
checklist to make sure you're branding well by giving your
name a foreign flavor rather than burdening your creation
with a seriously disadvantageous name.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

726 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2010-02-09 10:30:00

Written By:     Marcia Yudkin
Copyright:      2010
Contact Email:  mailto:[email protected]


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Four Warnings Regarding a Foreign-Sounding (or Foreign-Looking) New Business 
Name
Copyright (c) 2010 Marcia Yudkin
Creative Marketing Solutions
http://www.yudkin.com/



In 1915, California farmers banded together to rename the
ahuacate, a pear-shaped fruit with pebbly skin and an oversized
pit inside. They knew this Aztec word was hard for Americans to
pronounce, and the Spanish version of the name, aguacate, was
just as difficult for them. The new made-up name they agreed
upon, avocado, sounds vaguely Latin American but does not present
pronunciation problems for English speakers.

Those California farmers wisely recognized that an unfamiliar
product with an unfamiliar name is hard enough to market, and
when it also has a name whose sound patterns are unfamiliar to
the ears of the public, that's one success barrier too many.

Foreign names for companies or products sometimes do very well in
the American market. We also see plenty of pseudo-foreign names -
created by misapplying spelling patterns found in foreign
languages. For example, "soleil" is the French word for sun.
When a suntan lotion placed a circumflex mark over the "o" in
"soleil," it created fake French. Such names can appeal to
those who have a slight knowledge of the foreign language -
enough to recognize foreign implication but not enough to
identify its implementation as wrong.

Use the following four-point checklist to make sure you're
branding well by giving your name a foreign flavor rather than
burdening your creation with a seriously disadvantageous name.

1. Does the spelling create uncertainty? A Chinese appliance
company uses the brand name Haier for its Germanic implication of
technical quality. However, with that spelling, an English
speaker might pronounce it either HIGHer or HAYer.

Likewise, imagine someone confronting the brand name Pricci for
the first time. It might be meant as an Italian surname, but that
still leaves open whether it should sound like "preachy" or
like PREEsee - or even like a cheeky spelling of "pricey."
Hesitation over pronunciation hurts word of mouth publicity.

2. Are there diacritical marks? These include accent marks, the
umlaut (two dots over a vowel, common in German), the o-slash
(ø) in Danish and Norwegian, the tilde (that little squiggle
over the "n" in Spanish words like señor) and many others.
Sometimes these are added because they are needed to be correct
in the foreign language that is the source of the name, and
sometimes, as with the suntan lotion with the extra circumflex,
these are added solely for effect. Either way, the marks signal
foreignness and make a reader slow down and consider how to say
the word.

Note that many people don't know how to type special characters.
And on the web, some browsers and email readers don't interpret
those special characters correctly. Consequently, brand names
with accents, circumflexes, umlauts, tildes and o-slashes often
get butchered in writing. (I've mostly avoided using them in
this article for that reason.) If your media coverage and
bloggers leave them out, then your branding becomes inconsistent.

3. Does the written name seem totally forbidding to your target
audience? It's not surprising that no one, as of this writing,
has yet snagged the domain XuStore.com even though it would be
pronounced "Shoe Store," because the name Xu (also written Hsu
in another transliteration system) flummoxes Westerners who do
not speak Chinese. I understand that the common Vietnamese name
Nguyen is pronounced nWEN, but that's another one that many
Westerners encountering it for the first time would not even dare
to try.

A foreign company name might also seem forbidding mainly because
it's long and contains syllables that have to be painstakingly
sounded out. For example, both

Kamehameha Kites, named after a Hawaiian king, and Vneshtorgbank
(a large Russian enterprise which is now called Bank VTB), would
give many Americans pause.

4. Is your target market clueless when it comes to foreign
languages? A customer base that has traveled widely and knows one
or two non-English languages generally takes a hard-to-say
foreign name in stride better than a stay-at-home population of
English-only folks.

My advice is that a "yes" to more than one of the above four
questions indicates too high a risk for your naming. Just one
"yes," however, could make for a cool invention. Remember
Häagen-Dazs? That premium ice cream brand got a massive boost
from its fake-Swedish name. Despite its umlaut and weird
alphabetical sequences, it has only one probable pronunciation -
and sophisticated, well-heeled consumers took to it like, well, a
scrumptious treat. 




---------------------------------------------------------------------
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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