✅ Learn how to leverage LLM AI tools to brainstorm and supercharge your ideation process.
✅ ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini and similar tools can be used.
1# EXAMPLE – BASIC:
5 Online Business Title Ideas
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Next Layer Studio
Implied growth, depth, and progression — great for digital services, branding, or education. -
Flowline Digital
Modern, calm, and scalable. Works well for online platforms, systems, or creative businesses. -
Elevate Lab
Signals experimentation, improvement, and results — strong for coaching, marketing, or SaaS. -
Northbound Online
Conveys direction, guidance, and momentum — ideal for consulting, personal brands, or courses. -
Signal & Scale
Very strong for online business, marketing, or growth-focused products.
Here’s how you can improve the result by using modifiers:
Act as [Someone relevant]. Give me 5 ideas on my online business title [Ask to personalize].
2# EXAMPLE – ADVANCED:
We’ll approach this the way a senior creative agency would before naming a serious online business — strategy first, creativity second. A strong title is a positioning decision, not decoration.
Before we present any name ideas, we need clarity. Please answer the questions below as precisely as you can. Short bullet answers are perfectly fine.
Phase 1 — Strategic Clarity (Non-negotiable)
- What is the core business model?
(e.g. consulting, agency, education, SaaS, digital products, media, hybrid) - Who is the primary buyer?
- Individuals / founders / creators
- SMBs / startups
- Enterprises
- Other (be specific)
- What problem do you actually solve?
Not features — the real pain or ambition. - Is this built around you or can it outgrow you?
- Personal brand
- Brand-led (team / system first)
Phase 2 — Positioning & Differentiation
- What makes you meaningfully different from competitors?
(Experience, worldview, speed, taste, methodology, network, pricing, tone, etc.) - Which space do you want to win in?
- Crowded (Red Ocean — better execution)
- New / reframed (Blue Ocean — different rules)
- Who do you NOT want as a client?
This is critical for naming.
Phase 3 — Brand Personality
- Pick 3 adjectives that must describe the brand (e.g. bold, calm, intelligent).
- Should the title feel more:
- Authoritative (McKinsey, Stripe)
- Creative (IDEO, Notion)
- Provocative (Vice, Basecamp)
- Human (Substack, Gumroad)
- Emotional tone:
- Safe & trusted
- Ambitious & aspirational
- Rebellious & unconventional
- Minimal & rational
Phase 4 — Practical Constraints
- Language preference:
- English only
- Hybrid
- Non-English (specify)
- One-word, two-word, or open to both?
- Should the name work as:
- A company
- A platform
- A long-term brand (10+ years)
- Any words, clichés, or styles you hate?
Phase 5 — Vision Check (This is where good names come from)
- In 3–5 years, what would make you say:
“This business worked.” - If this brand were known for one thing only, what should that be?
What Happens Next
Once you answer these:
- We will synthesize strategy → positioning → linguistic direction
- Then present 5 highly intentional business title options, each with:
- Rationale
- Target perception
- Why it wins vs competitors
No generic names. No trends-for-the-sake-of-trends.
This is how brands that last are named.
We’re going to treat this as a real naming sprint, not a brainstorm.
Below are 5 deliberately engineered title ideas, built from your inputs and filtered through a 20+ year creative agency lens. Each name is short, scalable, and aligned with Gen Z behavior, speed, and trust — without sounding childish or gimmicky.
Strategic Snapshot (what we optimized for)
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Audience: 18–25 students (Gen Z)
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Promise: Fastest path to reliable information
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Personality: Smart, cheeky, chill
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Tone: Creative + slightly provocative, but still safe
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Positioning: New category, tech-led, platform-scale (1M+ users)
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Avoid: Academic, corporate, “study grind” clichés
1. Skipit
Why it works
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Instantly communicates time-saving
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Cheeky, memorable, very Gen Z-native
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Implies bypassing noise, fluff, and endless searching
Perception
“Why read everything when you can Skipit?”
Why it scales
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Platform-ready
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Works globally
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Strong verb potential (“Just skipit”)
2. Fastory
(Fast + Story)
Why it works
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Signals speed and understanding (not just raw info)
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Feels educational without being academic
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Soft, friendly, safe — but still modern
Perception
“Fast stories, clear understanding.”
Why it scales
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Flexible for multiple formats (AI summaries, explainers, learning paths)
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Feels like a knowledge layer, not a tool
3. Shortcut
Why it works
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Extremely literal — and that’s a strength
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Provocative but safe: students want shortcuts
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Communicates your USP in one word
Perception
“The shortcut to knowing things.”
Why it scales
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Obvious value proposition
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Perfect for onboarding and virality
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Very strong for word-of-mouth
4. Blink
Why it works
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Implies instant access, speed, clarity
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Clean, tech-forward, minimal
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Feels calm and safe, not chaotic
Perception
“Information in a blink.”
Why it scales
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Premium-feeling
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SaaS-native
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Works well for AI-driven experiences
5. KnowNow
Why it works
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Immediate understanding + immediacy
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Slightly provocative because it challenges slow learning models
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Extremely clear promise
Perception
“You don’t need to know everything — just know it now.”
Why it scales
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Great retention messaging
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Strong for push notifications, features, and growth loops
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Very accessible to non-native English speakers