The Norman Awards Announces Winners of Best Company and Product Names for 2016

SAN FRANCISCO, CA--(Marketwired - Mar 1, 2017) - Movies have the Oscars®, music has the GRAMMYs®, advertising has the Clios®, and now brand names have a prize just for them. Introducing the Normans™: an annual award to honor creativity in brand name development.

A company or product name is perhaps the most important attribute of any brand because it invites you to engage in a relationship with that brand. Generating a relevant -- yet distinct -- brand name is not easy. 500,000 new businesses launch every month while 360,000 name requests stream across the desks of the UPSTO annually.

"It's important that we honor great new brand names," said Mike Pile, creative director of Uppercase Branding, a verbal identity consultancy that specializes in brand name development. "We thought it was long overdue to celebrate the most fundamental and enduring element of a brand: its name."

The past year has been especially fertile ground for naming, bringing us such luminary labels as Boaty McBoatFace, Tronc, Alphabet, Lil' Marco and Failing New York Times. But many names are not getting the recognition they deserve. Enter... The Normans.

WHY THE NORMANS?
Named for the Norman invasion of England in 1066, which significantly expanded the size and scope of the English language, the Norman Awards recognize creative and linguistic achievement in new company and product names.

THE PROCESS
Using its proprietary evaluative system, DESLER-Vessel, Uppercase Branding evaluated the nominees based on each name's fit to concept, descriptive relevance, emotional signals, semantic meaning, linguistic power, and competitive boldness. The Uppercase team scoured news releases, award shows and social media to come up with a shortlist for each category. And then the fun began.

THE AWARDS

Best New High-Tech Name
Alphabet is a fitting name for Google's holding company. It is broad, consistent with the company's unstated desire to rule the world, and a liberal arts counter to the STEM-oriented Google. Furthermore, it is consistent with the company's taxonomy that favors real words which are generally descriptive of the product.

Best New Name in Food or Beverage
New Primal is a boutique beef jerky brand out of North Carolina. While grammarians and other sticklers might quibble with a potential oxymoron, "Primal" captures the world of paleo and protein and hunters, while "New" modernizes and softens that imagery, rendering it palatable for every consumer.

Best New Name in Consumer Durables
Samsung's AddWash isn't going to win a MacArthur Genius grant or an Edison award, nor will it go in the pantheon of great brand names, but it does earn a Norman. For what it lacks in pure creativity it makes up for in elegant simplicity. It is descriptive, of course, but more than that it calls out to everybody who has ever found the one last sock under the bed after the load has started.