Brands are everywhere, and some are so prominent that we choose them because of their brand image rather than the quality of the product. Brands like Colgate and Pepsi have actually become synonyms of the products themselves. But have you ever wondered how these brands were named? Was it strategy or coincidence? Were they named after a person or after something significant?
To know that, scroll down and see how these 30 famous brands were christened:
1. Nike: Name for the Greek Goddess of Victory.
The swoosh signifies her flight.
Source: franchiseherald
2. Coca-Cola: The two main ingredients were Coca leaves and Cola berries.
Source: andbloom
3. Pepsi: From the digestive enzyme 'pepsin'.
Although pepsin is not an ingredient in the drink.
Source: benzinga
4. Google: Derived from 'googul' which means 1 followed by 100 zeros.
Signifies owners Larry Page and Sergey Brin's mission to provide innumerable info to all users.
Source: marketingland
5. Adidas: Named after owner Adolf Dassler whose nickname was Adi. Adi Dassler became Adidas.
Source: a-roundtheworld
6. Intel: Short for integrated electronics
Source: digitaltrends
7. Canon: Adapted from Kwanon (Japanese name of Buddhist Bodhisattva of Mercy).
It was changed to Canon for easier acceptance worldwide.
Source: ebay.in
8. Lego: Derived from Danish words 'Leg Godt', which means to 'play well'.
Lego also means 'put together' in Latin, which they claim is actually a coincidence.
Source: playmobilvslego
9. Nintendo: Transliterated from Nintendou. Nin in Japanese means 'entrusted' and Ten-dou means 'heaven'.
Source: superbwallpapers
10. Amazon: CEO Jeff Bazos wanted a name starting with 'A'. He chose Amazon because it is the biggest river in the world, just what he wanted his company to be.
Source: lengow
11. Skype: Originally the idea was 'Sky peer to peer', which later became Skyper and finally Skype.
Source: historyofinformation
12. Adobe: Named after a creek that ran behind the co-founder, John Warnock's house, called Adobe Creek.
Source: norebbo
13. Nokia: Started as wood-pulp mill, it expanded its business to producing rubber products in a city in Finland called Nokia.
Source: wayerless
14. Sony: Derived from the Latin word, 'Sonus' (meaning sound) and an American slang word, 'Sonny' (meaning bright youngster).
Source: techtree
15. Vodafone: Voice, Data and Telefone.
Source: blogzamana
(part 2 :15-30) |
No comments:
Post a Comment