Brainstorm with AI: Get Initial Ideas

🛠️ Tools: ChatGPT: Image Generator

🏷️ Pricing: FREE


✅ 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:

PROMPT: Give me 5 name ideas for my online business

AI Response
Sure — I’ll give you 5 versatile online business title ideas that work across many niches (digital products, services, education, content, consulting). After that, I can tailor them precisely once I know your niche.

5 Online Business Title Ideas

  1. Next Layer Studio
    Implied growth, depth, and progression — great for digital services, branding, or education.

  2. Flowline Digital
    Modern, calm, and scalable. Works well for online platforms, systems, or creative businesses.

  3. Elevate Lab
    Signals experimentation, improvement, and results — strong for coaching, marketing, or SaaS.

  4. Northbound Online
    Conveys direction, guidance, and momentum — ideal for consulting, personal brands, or courses.

  5. Signal & Scale
    Very strong for online business, marketing, or growth-focused products.

💡
TIP: You can use modifiers to improve the result

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:

PROMPT: Act as a Creative Agency with 20+ years of experience. Give me 5 ideas on my online business title by asking me a list of questions before sharing your ideas.

AI Response
Understood.
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)

  1. What is the core business model?
    (e.g. consulting, agency, education, SaaS, digital products, media, hybrid)
  2. Who is the primary buyer?
    • Individuals / founders / creators
    • SMBs / startups
    • Enterprises
    • Other (be specific)
  3. What problem do you actually solve?
    Not features — the real pain or ambition.
  4. Is this built around you or can it outgrow you?
    • Personal brand
    • Brand-led (team / system first)

Phase 2 — Positioning & Differentiation

  1. What makes you meaningfully different from competitors?
    (Experience, worldview, speed, taste, methodology, network, pricing, tone, etc.)
  2. Which space do you want to win in?
    • Crowded (Red Ocean — better execution)
    • New / reframed (Blue Ocean — different rules)
  3. Who do you NOT want as a client?
    This is critical for naming.

Phase 3 — Brand Personality

  1. Pick 3 adjectives that must describe the brand (e.g. bold, calm, intelligent).
  2. Should the title feel more:
    • Authoritative (McKinsey, Stripe)
    • Creative (IDEO, Notion)
    • Provocative (Vice, Basecamp)
    • Human (Substack, Gumroad)
  3. Emotional tone:
    • Safe & trusted
    • Ambitious & aspirational
    • Rebellious & unconventional
    • Minimal & rational

Phase 4 — Practical Constraints

  1. Language preference:
    • English only
    • Hybrid
    • Non-English (specify)
  2. One-word, two-word, or open to both?
  3. Should the name work as:
    • A company
    • A platform
    • A long-term brand (10+ years)
  4. Any words, clichés, or styles you hate?

Phase 5 — Vision Check (This is where good names come from)

  1. In 3–5 years, what would make you say:
    “This business worked.”
  2. 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.

PROMPT: 1. Education SaaS 2. individuals, aged 18-25 students. 3. Save their time finding the information 4. brand-led 5. new tech to find info quickly 6. new 7. anyone above 30. 8. smart, cheeky, chill 9. Creative, provocative. 10. safe. 11. english 12. 1-2. 13. A platform 14. nope 15. 1m and more users 16. fastest way today to reach info.

AI Response
Perfect.
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)

  • Audience: 18–25 students (Gen Z)

  • Promise: Fastest path to reliable information

  • Personality: Smart, cheeky, chill

  • Tone: Creative + slightly provocative, but still safe

  • Positioning: New category, tech-led, platform-scale (1M+ users)

  • Avoid: Academic, corporate, “study grind” clichés


1. Skipit

Why it works

  • Instantly communicates time-saving

  • Cheeky, memorable, very Gen Z-native

  • Implies bypassing noise, fluff, and endless searching

Perception

“Why read everything when you can Skipit?”

Why it scales

  • Platform-ready

  • Works globally

  • Strong verb potential (“Just skipit”)


2. Fastory

(Fast + Story)

Why it works

  • Signals speed and understanding (not just raw info)

  • Feels educational without being academic

  • Soft, friendly, safe — but still modern

Perception

“Fast stories, clear understanding.”

Why it scales

  • Flexible for multiple formats (AI summaries, explainers, learning paths)

  • Feels like a knowledge layer, not a tool


3. Shortcut

Why it works

  • Extremely literal — and that’s a strength

  • Provocative but safe: students want shortcuts

  • Communicates your USP in one word

Perception

“The shortcut to knowing things.”

Why it scales

  • Obvious value proposition

  • Perfect for onboarding and virality

  • Very strong for word-of-mouth


4. Blink

Why it works

  • Implies instant access, speed, clarity

  • Clean, tech-forward, minimal

  • Feels calm and safe, not chaotic

Perception

“Information in a blink.”

Why it scales

  • Premium-feeling

  • SaaS-native

  • Works well for AI-driven experiences


5. KnowNow

Why it works

  • Immediate understanding + immediacy

  • Slightly provocative because it challenges slow learning models

  • Extremely clear promise

Perception

“You don’t need to know everything — just know it now.”

Why it scales

  • Great retention messaging

  • Strong for push notifications, features, and growth loops

  • Very accessible to non-native English speakers