The right brand name is half the job: a name that is easy to pronounce, memorable, available as a (.com) domain, culturally neutral and unlikely to cause trouble in trademark registration will carry your brand for years. Changing a poorly chosen name later is both expensive and painful.
When you open a naming contest on Tasarlatasarlat, your brief reaches dozens of creative minds; each one comes up with 10–30 suggestions for you. You aren't limited to what a single consultant happens to think of — you choose among hundreds of different associations, roots and wordplays.
This is not a free name list or automatic generator. You start a private, paid naming contest for a new company, product or venture; compare submissions in your private panel, shortlist them and pick the winning name.
What to clarify in a naming brief
- Industry and what you sell — what should the name evoke, what feeling should it carry?
- Target audience and language — Turkish, English, invented/brandable?
- Tone — serious and corporate, friendly, fun, luxury…
- Must-haves and forbidden words — roots you want included, words to avoid.
- The .com requirement — is domain availability critical for you?
Suggestions usually arrive with a short rationale and usage note; you pick the one you like most and take its rights. Before your final decision, we recommend checking the domain and trademark availability of the proposed name.
Naming contests are handled with special privacy: candidate names aren't listed publicly, so your ideas stay protected. Note: slogan is a separate category — when opening a contest, under Brand & Identity choose the Brand Name or Slogan category according to your need.
Brand name, company name, product name — all in one
Are you looking for a new brand name, a corporate company name, or a name for a product about to launch? The same contest model works for all: you write your goal — a brand, company or product name — into the brief, and creative participants generate ideas within that frame. Ask for a fully invented/brandable name or one rooted in real words; the decision is yours.
So how do you find a good brand name? In short: keep it short and easy to pronounce, let it evoke your field without boxing you in, make sure the .com domain and trademark are available, and check it carries no negative meaning in other languages. Seeing dozens of ideas side by side — instead of one person's limited view — makes finding a name that meets these criteria far easier. For a quick start, try the free AI brand name generator.
Want to have your brand name made professionally? This model is the most economical way to gather ideas from dozens of creatives without being tied to a single agency. Compare packages and see what's included on the brand name pricing page.


