Install
openclaw skills install naming-and-domainsName a business, product, or service and secure a matching domain. Use when brainstorming names, evaluating name quality, checking domain availability, choos...
openclaw skills install naming-and-domainsYour name is the first brand touchpoint and the one customers repeat most. A bad name creates friction at every stage — hard to spell, hard to find, easy to confuse with competitors. A great name is memorable, pronounceable, and available. This playbook takes you from zero to a locked-in name with a matching domain.
Before generating names, set the guardrails. This prevents wasting time on names that can't work.
Must-haves:
Preferences (nice-to-have, not dealbreakers):
Use multiple naming techniques. Quantity now, quality later.
Name the outcome, not the feature. What does the customer get?
Map a concept from another domain onto what your product does.
Combine syllables from real words to create something new and unique.
Simply describe what the product does, clearly.
Short, punchy words that feel right but don't literally describe the product.
Take your 30+ candidates and run them through this scoring rubric (1-3 per criterion):
| Criterion | 1 | 2 | 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pronounceability | Ambiguous pronunciation | Mostly clear | Obviously clear on first read |
| Memorability | Forgettable | Decent | Sticks after one hearing |
| Spelling clarity | Could be spelled multiple ways | Slight ambiguity | Only one obvious spelling |
| Relevance | No connection to the product | Loose connection | Strong, intuitive connection |
| Availability | .com taken by a major player | .com taken but alternative available | .com available |
| Trademark risk | Likely conflicts exist | Possible conflicts | Clean — no obvious conflicts |
Score each candidate. Top 5-8 advance to domain and trademark checks.
Check .com first. .com is still the strongest signal of legitimacy for most audiences.
Check tools:
If .com is taken, evaluate alternatives in this priority order:
Decision rule: If your .com is taken by an active, well-known competitor, do not fight it. Pick a different name where .com is clean. One confusable domain is a marketing nightmare forever.
You are not a lawyer — but do a basic sanity check before committing:
Red flags: An active trademark in your exact industry or a company with significant presence using the same name. If you see either, pick a different name.
Note: A full trademark search by a lawyer costs $300-500 and is worth it before you invest heavily in the brand. Do the basic check now, the full check before you spend on branding.
From your top 3-5 candidates (that passed domain + trademark checks), do a final validation round:
1. Say it out loud 20 times. Does it feel natural? Does it roll off the tongue?
2. Have 5 strangers spell it after you say it. (Text a friend, ask them to write it down after you say the name once.) If more than 1 person gets it wrong, the spelling is ambiguous.
3. Google it. What comes up? If the first page is dominated by something completely unrelated and popular, your name will fight for attention in search. Not ideal.
4. Check social handles. Search Twitter/X, Instagram, LinkedIn, YouTube for your name. Are the handles available? Consistency across platforms matters.
5. Gut check with your target customer. Share your top 3 names with 3-5 people in your target segment. Which one resonates? Which one feels trustworthy for the problem you solve? Their instincts matter more than yours here.
Once you've chosen: