HomeServicesBranding › Name development

Name development

Naming a business or product is one of the few decisions you live with for the life of the company. A practical pre-flight: trademark check, domain check, the say-it-down-the-phone test, and the .ie / .com call.

Naming a business is part creative, part legal, part SEO, part vibes. The temptation is to fall in love with a name before checking whether you can actually use it. The discipline is the reverse: validate first, fall in love second.

The four checks before you commit

  1. Trademark. Search the Irish Patents Office (IPOI) database and the EUIPO database for any existing registrations in your class. A name that's already registered in your sector is a name you cannot safely use, no matter how clever it is.
  2. Companies Registration Office. Search the CRO register at core.cro.ie for company-name conflicts. The CRO will reject a registration too similar to an existing one.
  3. Domain. Both .ie and .com if international ambitions exist. .ie eligibility no longer requires a connection-to-Ireland test (changed in 2018) but still requires an Irish or EU-resident registrant. WeAre.ie and IEDR.ie are the registry sources of truth.
  4. Social handles. A two-minute check on Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, and X. Inconsistent handles across platforms (one is "alphapods," another is "alpha_pods") give you a poor digital footprint forever.

The "say it down the phone" test

Read the candidate name to a stranger over a phone. Then ask them to spell it back. If they can't, you've created a permanent friction in your business — every customer service call, every word-of-mouth referral, every podcast intro. Names with creative spellings ("Kwik," "Phoenix" with a silent letter, made-up portmanteaus) lose this test cheaply.

What makes a name work in 2026

  • Pronounceable in one pass. No second-guessing.
  • Spellable in one pass. Especially for a domain.
  • Distinctive enough to trademark. Generic names ("Dublin Plumbing") are descriptive — they work for SEO, but you can't easily defend them.
  • Short. Six letters or fewer is a gift. Twelve is acceptable. Twenty is a millstone.
  • Survives translation if you might trade abroad. Spend ten minutes checking the name doesn't mean something embarrassing in Spanish, German, or French.

Common naming traps

  • Founder-name overload. "John Smith Plumbing" — fine for a one-person trade, hard to grow or sell.
  • Geographic lock-in. "Dublin Bookkeeping" works until you take on Galway clients.
  • Service-trend lock-in. "Cloud Solutions Ltd" was modern in 2015, dated by 2022.
  • Made-up words with no anchor. "Glomptra," "Yenzo." Memorable to the founder, alphabet soup to everyone else.

Domain strategy

For a small Irish business serving Irish customers: .ie is the right primary. Add the .com if available and reasonably priced; redirect it to the .ie. For a business with B2B or international ambitions, the .com is primary; .ie redirects to it. Owning common typo domains and the misspelt phonetic version is sometimes worth €20/year each.

Cost expectations

You can name a business yourself in two evenings if you do the four checks above. Paying a naming consultant €5,000–€15,000 is a real service — they bring distance and pattern recognition — but isn't required for most Irish small businesses. The decision usually comes down to how visible the name will be (a packaged consumer product justifies a consultant; an accountancy practice usually doesn't).

Related

Ready to commission this kind of work?

The Marketing Pod is a journal — we don't take on client projects directly. For name development, trademark research and identity rollout we recommend our studio, Raven Design — experienced Dublin web design and digital marketing for Irish businesses.

Visit ravendesign.ie →