Naming 6-Gates Protocol
Overview
Brand naming in 2026 is architectural engineering, not creative brainstorming. A name must be:
- Machine-compatible - tokenized efficiently by LLMs, citeable by AI engines
- Legally defensible - clear of trademark conflicts across jurisdictions
- Voice-ready - pronounceable by assistants, invocable without friction
- Narratively loaded - capable of carrying a brand story
Core principle: Optimize for AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) first, aesthetics second.
When to Use
- Creating a new brand, product, or company name
- Replacing a name due to trademark conflict
- Expanding internationally (multilingual requirements)
- Launching a voice-activated product or skill
- Naming for AI-first discovery (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini recommendations)
When NOT to Use
- Internal project codenames (no legal/AEO requirements)
- Temporary campaign names
- Personal projects with no commercial intent
The 6-Gate Naming Process
digraph naming_process {
rankdir=TB;
node [shape=box];
brief [label="1. BRIEF\nDefine constraints"];
generate [label="2. GENERATE\nAI-assisted creation"];
filter [label="3. LINGUISTIC FILTER\nMultilingual stress test"];
legal [label="4. LEGAL FILTER\nTrademark screening"];
aeo [label="5. AEO FILTER\nEntity strength test"];
story [label="6. STORY FILTER\nNarrative potential"];
brief -> generate -> filter -> legal -> aeo -> story;
filter -> generate [label="fails" style=dashed];
legal -> generate [label="conflicts" style=dashed];
aeo -> generate [label="weak entity" style=dashed];
story -> generate [label="no narrative" style=dashed];
}
Gate 1: BRIEF (Constraints Definition)
Define hard constraints BEFORE generating:
| Constraint | Target | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Length | 7-8 letters max | Mobile icons, cognitive load, tokenization |
| Syllables | 1-3 syllables | Voice invocation, memorability |
| Character set | A-Z only | Domain availability, global keyboards |
| Forbidden sequences | ght, ough, silent letters | Pronunciation barriers |
Output format:
brief:
max_letters: 8
max_syllables: 3
target_markets: [FR, ES, US, UK]
nice_classes: [9, 35, 42]
avoid_phonemes: [ʒ, θ, ð] # Hard for non-native speakers
competitor_names: [Notion, Figma, Linear] # Style reference
forbidden_associations: [medical, financial, religious]
Gate 2: GENERATE (AI-Assisted Creation)
Use structured prompting with 5 typologies:
Typology 1: Analogical (Real-Word Transfer)
Words from unrelated domains applied to new context.
- Examples: Apple (tech), Amazon (retail), Jaguar (auto)
- Prompt: "Find words from [nature/mythology/geography] that evoke [core attribute]"
Typology 2: Metaphorical (Abstract Concept)
Abstract concepts made concrete.
- Examples: Slack (workspace tension release), Notion (idea capture)
- Prompt: "What single word captures the transformation from [pain] to [outcome]?"
Typology 3: Neologism (Invented Word)
New words with phonetic engineering.
- Examples: Kodak, Xerox, Häagen-Dazs
- Prompt: "Create a 2-syllable word with [plosive start] + [open vowel] + [soft ending]"
Typology 4: Portmanteau (Fusion)
Blend of two meaningful words.
- Examples: Instagram (instant + telegram), Pinterest (pin + interest)
- Prompt: "Blend [word1] + [word2] keeping recognition of both roots"
Typology 5: Empty Vessel
Meaningless but phonetically pleasing.
- Examples: Rolex, Vimeo, Skype
- Prompt: "Generate 5-letter combinations: CVCVC pattern, no existing meaning"
Generation Contract:
CONSTRAINTS:
- Max 8 letters
- Pronounceable in French, Spanish, English
- No existing trademark in Class 42
- Distinct from: [competitor list]
OUTPUT FORMAT per candidate:
- Name: [word]
- Typology: [1-5]
- Phonetic: /IPA transcription/
- Syllables: [count]
- Rationale: [1 sentence]
Gate 3: LINGUISTIC FILTER (Multilingual Stress Test)
Test each candidate across target markets:
Pronunciation Test
Run through TTS engines in 15+ languages:
- Google TTS, Amazon Polly, Azure Speech
- Listen for: mispronunciation, confusion, awkwardness
Cultural Connotation Check
Verify no negative meanings in:
- Target market slang (TikTok, Douyin, RedNote trends)
- Historical associations
- Religious/political sensitivities
- Homophones in local languages
Phonetic Hazards to Avoid
| Hazard | Example | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Silent letters | "Knight" | Voice assistant failure |
| Consonant clusters | "Strengths" | Non-native difficulty |
| Ambiguous vowels | "Read" (reed/red) | Confusion |
| Cross-language homophones | "Gift" (poison in German) | Negative association |
Kill criterion: If TTS mispronounces in >2 target markets, reject.
Gate 4: LEGAL FILTER (Trademark Screening)
Phase 1: Quick Disqualification
- Google: "[name] company" / "[name] brand" / "[name] trademark"
- Domain check: .com, .co, .io, .fr, .eu
- Social handles: Namechk scan all platforms
Phase 2: Formal Trademark Search
| Registry | Tool | Check For |
|---|---|---|
| France | INPI data.inpi.fr | Exact + phonetic similarity |
| EU | EUIPO eSearch / TMview | Same Nice classes |
| US | USPTO TESS | Registered + pending |
| International | WIPO Global Brand Database | Madrid Protocol |
Phase 3: AI-Assisted Similarity Detection
EUIPO "Early TM Screening" detects:
- Phonetic similarity (sounds-like)
- Visual similarity (looks-like)
- Conceptual similarity (means-like)
Kill criterion: Any conflict in target Nice classes → reject.
Gate 5: AEO FILTER (Entity Strength Test)
A name must be recognizable as a distinct entity by AI systems.
Entity Strength Checklist
- Unique token: Does the name tokenize as a single unit or get split?
- No collision: Search "[name]" - does it return your intended context or noise?
- Semantic boundaries: Can AI distinguish "[name] the company" from generic usage?
Testing AEO Strength
Prompt to test:
"What is [NAME]?"
GOOD response: "I don't have information about [NAME]" (clean slate)
BAD response: "[NAME] is a common word meaning..." (collision)
BAD response: "[NAME] could refer to several things..." (ambiguity)
Keyword Difficulty Check
Use Semrush/Ahrefs:
- Keyword difficulty < 30 = good
- Keyword difficulty > 60 = buried by generics
Kill criterion: If name collides with high-volume generic term, reject.
Gate 6: STORY FILTER (Narrative Potential)
A name must be "tell-able" - capable of carrying a brand story.
The 5 Narrative Pillars Test
For each candidate, verify you can build:
| Pillar | Question | Example Answer Required |
|---|---|---|
| Origin story | "Why this name?" | Must have a genuine, shareable reason |
| Belief story | What does the brand stand for? | Values must connect to name |
| Product truth | What does it actually do? | Name should hint at function |
| Transformation | What changes for the customer? | Before/after must be nameable |
| Culture | What kind of community forms? | Name should enable identity |
Empty Vessel vs. Loaded Name
- Empty vessel (Kodak, Google): Brand fills meaning over time
- Loaded name (Instagram, Airbnb): Meaning is built-in
Both work. But you must choose consciously and build accordingly.
Vocal Signature Test
Say the name aloud 10 times. Ask:
- Does it feel good in the mouth?
- Would customers enjoy saying it?
- Does it have a "sticky" quality?
Kill criterion: If you can't tell a compelling origin story, reject.
Voice Assistant Constraints (2026)
| Assistant | Invocation Rules | Rejection Risks |
|---|---|---|
| Alexa | 2+ words required (unless trademarked) | Single generic words |
| Siri | Must be phonetically distinct | Co |