Free Generator

Business Name Generator

Generate creative business name ideas in seconds

Converge Converge Team

Your Keywords

Name Ideas

Click "Generate Names" to see ideas.

A business name generator creates brandable name ideas based on your keywords, industry, and style preferences. It helps you move past the blank-page problem and explore naming directions you might not have considered. Once you've picked a name, generate your privacy policy and first invoice to start operating.

According to Squadhelp's analysis of 500,000 naming projects, the average founder considers 30-50 name options before making a final choice. The naming process typically takes 2-4 weeks. A generator accelerates the brainstorming phase by producing dozens of options in seconds.

The most valuable brand names share common traits. Research from the University of Alberta found that names with high "processing fluency" — easy to read, pronounce, and remember — are perceived as more trustworthy and associated with better products. This aligns with why simple names like Apple, Nike, and Uber outperform complex, descriptive alternatives.

This generator combines your keywords with common naming patterns: compound words, suffix additions (-ify, -ly, -hub), prefix modifications, and portmanteaus. It produces names across four styles — professional, modern, creative, and abstract — so you can explore different branding directions.

How to Use This Generator

  1. Enter keywords: Type 1-3 words related to your business (e.g., "cloud", "support", "fast").
  2. Select a style: Choose Professional, Modern, Creative, or Abstract to set the naming direction.
  3. Generate names: Click "Generate" to get 10 name ideas. Click again for fresh results.
  4. Copy favorites: Click any name to copy it, then check domain and trademark availability.

Pro Tips

  • Try multiple keywords: Run the generator several times with different keyword combinations. "Support" + "fast" gives different results than "help" + "quick".
  • Check the .com domain: While alternative TLDs (.io, .co, .app) are accepted, .com still carries the most trust for most audiences.
  • Say it out loud: Read each name aloud. If it's awkward to say, customers will avoid saying it too. The "phone test" — can someone hear it and spell it correctly? — is the ultimate filter.
  • Sleep on it: Don't decide immediately. Shortlist 5-10 names, wait 48 hours, and see which ones you still remember without looking at your list.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you come up with a good business name?
A good business name is memorable, easy to spell and pronounce, available as a domain, and gives some hint of what you do. According to research from the University of Alberta, names that are easy to pronounce are perceived as more trustworthy. Keep it under 3 words and avoid hyphens, numbers, and unusual spellings.
Should a business name describe what you do?
Not necessarily. Descriptive names (General Electric, International Business Machines) explain the business but are harder to trademark. Abstract names (Apple, Google, Nike) are more memorable and easier to trademark. The best approach for startups is a suggestive name that hints at your value without being literal.
How do I check if a business name is available?
Check three things: (1) Domain availability at a registrar like Namecheap or GoDaddy, (2) Trademark conflicts at USPTO.gov (US) or your country's trademark office, (3) Social media handle availability. Also search Google to make sure no established business uses the same or confusingly similar name in your industry.
What makes a business name memorable?
Cognitive science research identifies several factors: simplicity (fewer syllables), distinctiveness (stands out from competitors), phonetic appeal (pleasant sounds), and emotional resonance (evokes a feeling). Names with hard consonants (K, T, P) tend to feel more dynamic, while soft sounds (S, L, M) feel more calming.
Can I use a made-up word as a business name?
Yes, and it's often advantageous. Made-up names like Spotify, Skype, and Zillow are highly trademarkable and unique. Blend two relevant words (Instagram = Instant + Telegram), add a suffix (-ify, -ly, -io), or modify existing words. Made-up names require more marketing investment to build recognition but own their space completely.
How long should a business name be?
Ideally 1-2 words and under 10 characters. Shorter names are easier to remember, type, and fit on logos and business cards. Research from Siegel+Gale's brand simplicity index shows that the most valuable brands tend to have names under 8 characters. If you need multiple words, consider an acronym for daily use.

Ready to try Converge?

$49/month flat. Up to 15 agents. 14-day free trial.

Start Free Trial