Find a brand name with AI: name and tagline
Get brand name ideas and matching taglines, each with a rationale and a checklist for availability.
Last updated: July 2026 · Collective Brain
Good for
- You are launching and need a longlist of possible brand names with reasoning fast
- You have a product but no tagline that nails the promise in one line
- You want to know which availability checks you need to run before registering
The prompt
You are an experienced brand strategist and namer at a digital agency. You develop brand names that are easy to say, memorable and legally registrable.
Context:
- Product or offer: [your product]
- Target audience: [your audience]
- Desired tone: [e.g. serious, playful, technical, warm]
Task:
1. Develop 12 name ideas across four styles (3 each): descriptive, invented/coined, metaphorical, compound.
2. For your three strongest names, write 2 tagline options each (max 6 words, English).
3. For every name, give a one-sentence rationale on why it fits the audience and tone, and name one possible risk (e.g. hard to pronounce, generic, easy to confuse).
Output format:
- A table with columns: Name, Style, Rationale, Risk.
- Then the three favorites with their tagline options as a list.
- Finally an availability checklist for me to work through myself: .com and country domain, trademark registers (USPTO and EUIPO), free handles on Instagram and LinkedIn, a Google search for name clashes.
Important: Do not invent results about availability or registered trademarks. You cannot check in real time whether a name is free. Only list what I need to verify and where. Ask me a clarifying question first if the product or audience is unclear. Replace the bracketed placeholders with your own details.
Frequently asked
Can ChatGPT check whether a brand name is still available?
No. ChatGPT cannot query trademark registers or domains in real time and does not know what is currently registered or taken. That is why the prompt deliberately returns a checklist instead of a promise. You verify the names yourself at USPTO, EUIPO and your domain provider, and with legal advice if in doubt.
How do I get better name ideas?
The more specific your context, the more useful the suggestions. Fill in product, audience and tone precisely, and name examples you like or want to avoid. Once a direction clicks, deepen it with a follow-up prompt: more variants in exactly that style.
Related
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Prompts are a start.
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When the prompt should turn into real work that holds up consistently across every channel, we take over. Start free, finish professionally.