| 1 | NEW YORK (AP) - What's in a name? |
| 2 | Most corporate naming experts say Google's decision to reorganize its businesses under a new holding company called "Alphabet" is close to letter perfect. |
| 3 | Because it is part of Google's corporate structure, Alphabet is not likely to become part of the lexicon like "Googling" did; it will mainly be used on Wall Street. |
| 4 | But the name Alphabet itself is simple and fits with Google's reputation as being "user friendly and elementary," says Tom Sepanski, naming and verbal identity director of branding firm Landor. |
| 5 | "Something about it is so fundamental," adds Sagi Haviv, a partner at identity firm Chermayeff & Geismar & Haviv. |
| 6 | "It's a metaphor, just like any word can be created out of the alphabet, any concept can be realized." |
| 7 | The move by Google highlights how important corporate names are. |
| 8 | Google joins a long line of companies that have created quirky, confusing and sometimes hard-to-pronounce company names. |
| 9 | Creating a corporate name - or changing it - is a delicate balance. |
| 10 | A good name must convey what the company stands for. |
| 11 | It should be catchy, too. |
| 12 | But sometimes creative names backfire: When Kraft Foods spun off its snack food division and named it Mondelez in 2012, for instance, the reaction was not enthusiastic. |
| 13 | The New York Post ran a headline that simply asked: "MONDEWHAAAT?" |
| 14 | Other times, boring names are met with criticism. |
| 15 | When HP named its research division Agilent in 1999, some critics deemed it too lackluster. |
| 16 | Most naming experts agree that Google struck the right balance with Alphabet. |
| 17 | "We think about a name as a first word in a story but not the whole story," said Nikolas Contis, global director of naming and branding firm Siegel+Gale. |
| 18 | "In each case, it's what's the simple idea expressed through surprising language." |
| 19 | Nikolas Contis, global director of naming and branding firm Siegel + Gale, said Alphabet ranks up there with Apple and Amazon and more recently, Uber. |
| 20 | They infuse a simple word with key brand attributes. |
| 21 | Amazon's name, for example, helped convey the company's aggressive growth plans from an online bookseller into an e-commerce powerhouse that could expand into everything from drones to cloud services, Contis said. |
| 22 | "It was utterly simple and very strategic," he said. |
| 23 | More recently, the name of ride-sharing app Uber - which basically means a supreme version of something - helped people understand that the company was trying to reinvent the taxi business, Contis said. |
| 24 | "The best names explode conventions and create new references points," he said. |
| 25 | Google is staying mum about how they came up with the name, but CEO Larry Page explained key reasoning in a blog post. |
| 26 | "We liked the name Alphabet because it means a collection of letters that represent language, one of humanity's most important innovations, and is the core of how we index with Google search," he wrote. |
| 27 | "We also like that it means alpha-bet (Alpha is investment return above benchmark), which we strive for." |
| 28 | Because the word is a commonly used word, Google likely invested heavily in it, i.e. buying licenses or companies with relevant trademarks, said Landor's Sepanski. |
| 29 | Although some companies and brands can exist with the same name (think Dove soap and Dove chocolate), the simpler the name, the more likely that someone owns the trademark. |
| 30 | "It was probably a very expensive name," he said. |
| 31 | "Most real-world names are taken. It's hard for me to believe they could register the trademark without a lot of money trading hands behind the scenes." |
| 32 | In the end, the name works because it fits in with Google's brand, said David Placek, founder of Lexicon Branding in Sausalito, California. |
| 33 | "Something as fun and simple as alphabet works for them," he said. |
| 34 | "If Bank of America created a holding company called Alphabet, I think it would be met with good deal of skepticism." |
| 35 | Google says the new holding company will provide an umbrella for its separate divisions like Nest, which makes Internet-connected home appliances, and Calico, which is conducting cutting-edge health research, more independence. |
| 36 | The segmentation of Google divisions under the Alphabet banner helps the name fit too. |
| 37 | "They probably did need a holding company to open things up, and show what they're doing and where they're spending money," Placek said. |
| 38 | "So they're getting a positive reception based on that, and also people just like the name." |