‘Great companies make meaning. A company has a name, but its people give it meaning.’
— Richard Pascale, author and business advisor
What’s in a name? A whole lot, as it turns out.
We’ve written about naming things like projects and companies before. There’s a tremendous amount at stake with a company name, in particular. It is the central hub of your brand, your culture, your logo, your messaging… how you are perceived, how people find you, what people remember about you… it bears a significant relationship to your product, competitors, audience and industry… already, that’s a huge amount of meaning to squeeze into one or two words.
Then again, Steve Jobs supposedly called his company ‘Apple’ because he liked fruit. Maybe naming a company is that simple.
A name is, often, the first thing you have to come up with, after ‘The Big Idea’. (Sometimes it comes even before that!) So, it is a reflection both of your company’s origins and its future ambitions. It sets the tone.
This brand name review is the first in what we aim to make a series in which we analyse each brand name of one hundred businesses in a given sector using our unique framework.
The intention is to provide you with some insight and context for your own brand and naming decisions.
Today, we’re looking at EdTech companies.
To be clear, this framework is something we’ve developed at Articulate because we think it is a useful and ‘truthy’ angle (to borrow a term from Stephen Colbert) from which to assess multiple brand naming trends.
Worth noting that we’re not here to judge these names as ‘good’ or ‘bad’. This review is to show how these names can be broken down and analysed, to observe patterns and to understand why people might make certain naming choices.
The framework consists of a scoring system across four criteria, which we will explain shortly:
‘Composite — Singular’ are on one axis and ‘Allusive — Rationalised’ are on the other. So, a name might score as ‘Composite and Allusive’ in one quadrant, or ‘Composite and Rationalised’ in another. Or, alternatively, ‘Singular and Allusive’ in the third quadrant, or ‘Singular and Rationalised’ in the final quadrant. This is on a sliding scale.
Hopefully, our overview of your sector will help you either come up with a thoughtfully chosen company name based on your goals, or evaluate your existing company name or a competitor’s name within this framework. It will tell you something about trends, approaches, types of businesses, styles of operating and so on. It’s an insight into the makeup of your sector from a branding perspective.
So, what do these four criteria mean?
Composite names are made up of several meaningful parts, or elements, combined. In the case of EdTech and lifelong learning technology companies, this might look like ‘[word] Learning’ or ‘[word] Campus]’ or perhaps one word made of parts, such as ‘EduLearn’.
Why do EdTechs choose composite names?
These kinds of names are particularly practical for EdTechs because education technology is such a broad sector with a huge variety of audiences. For example, an EdTech might provide an adult learning platform for accountants — ‘Accounducate’ (we checked, you can have that one). Or, they can add a named person — ‘Bertsch Innovation’ — or a positive, actionable descriptor to an industry term (as you can tell, we like this use case!).
Examples outside of EdTech:
On the other end of the spectrum to ‘Composite’ is ‘Singular’. These names are comprised of a single idea, word or name. Amazon. Peacocks. Harrods. Such names can also comprise multiple words if they are centralised on a singular idea, e.g. ‘The Ambassador Platform’.
Why do EdTechs choose singular names?
These kinds of names are bold and memorable. If you can hit the right note, they are even ‘verbable’ — how often do you ‘Google’ something, for example? (This is not to say a composite name cannot be verbable too, such as ‘Photoshop’.) They can refer to the name of a person or simply be a sound, made up or otherwise.
Examples outside of EdTech:
Allusive brand names obliquely allude to something, usually to evoke a shared meaning or metaphor, often to adopt the positive association of something outside the normal associations with that sector. This often appears in the form of wordplay (a groan-worthy favourite of fish & chippies in the UK, e.g. ‘The Good Plaice’, but this can be done more artfully). Allusive company names are often emotive.
Why do EdTechs choose allusive names?
These kinds of names are popular among EdTechs and tech companies generally, simply because they can evoke multiple positive associations in one fell swoop. Of course, you can choose to lean into eye-catching or provocative associations, too — take Virgin Airlines, for example. For us, ‘Articulate’ conjures up associations of technical complexity, movement, linguistic fluency and so on. Allusive names appeal to certain audiences because they are often inherently playful and creative, so may be popular with EdTechs trying to reach younger audiences.
Examples outside of EdTech:
Rationalised brand names are often descriptive and pragmatic. They have a clear rationale, in other words, without necessarily relying on hidden meanings or allusions. Included in this category, they may have no meaning at all, such as ‘Kodak’ — the meaning is something that is rationalised by the company, but without any allusions baked in.
Why do EdTechs choose rationalised names?
These kinds of names are popular with EdTechs that prefer clarity of meaning over the potential for positive or notable associations. These companies want the name to do the explaining for them. Or, for the name to stand out as something new and different. That way, they get to define the brand’s meaning.
Examples outside of EdTech:
Each of the EdTech company names in our list has been reviewed in this context and given a score of between 1 and 5 across each axis:
In this example, the brand name, therefore, sits in the singular and allusive quadrant:
Composite and Allusive | Singular and Allusive | Composite and Rationalised | Singular and Rationalised |
---|---|---|---|
Bright Horizons | Amplify | Great Minds | Cambly |
Guild Education | Paper | Skillsoft | Saturn |
Multiverse | Remind | DreamBox Learning | Zearn |
Duolingo | Udacity | Newsela | Brainly |
Everspring | Optimism | Aceable | Preply |
Pluralsight | Voxy | AllCampus | Labster |
Course Hero | Kahoot! | 2U | The Ambassador Platform (TAC) |
GoGuardian | Flip | BrainPOP | Ayoa |
Panorama Education | Rosetta Stone | Quizlet | Education software solutions (ESS) |
Classkick | Inspera | Teachers Pay Teachers (TPT) | Turnitin |
Seesaw | Safecall | MasterClass | RoleplayUK |
PowerSchool | Zavvy | Unibuddy | School of PE |
Knewton Alta | Vernier | Simplilearn | Coursera |
Civitas Learning | Playbook | Infobase | School of Marketing |
WolframAlpha | inclusio | iAM Learning | |
Watermark Insights | Litmos | MeLearning | |
Edmentum | People People | SysAdmin, Audit, Network and Security (SANS) | |
Demosphere | Fuse | PrimaryTech | |
Atom Learning | Administrate | Age of Learning | |
Swing Education | Bibliu | B2W Group | |
Questeq | Perlego | Skillcast Group | |
Synergy Learning | FutureLearn | ||
Blueprint Prep | Scandlearn | ||
Instructure | ACI Learning | ||
CareerDash | Campus Works | ||
Kortext | Skilltec Training | ||
pi-Top | AFI Group | ||
myQuest | Classical Learning Resource Center (CLRC) | ||
Udemy | |||
Skillshare | |||
Outschool | |||
PAIRIN | |||
MEL Science | |||
MyTutor | |||
Family Learning Company | |||
Smart Steps | |||
Small Business Pro University |
So, where does your EdTech sit within our framework? What does that say about your company and, most importantly, does your marketing messaging align with how you want your brand to be perceived? If you need the support of expert marketing strategists to help you differentiate your brand and get your name out there, then get in touch with award-winning agency, Articulate Marketing.