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Naming in an AI Age

Naming in an AI Age

Hosted by The NameStormers

BusinessMarketingInterviews guests

Episodes

92

Latest episode

Jan 2026

Language

EN-US

About the show

Join members of the NameStormers team as they explore the nuances of the creative nature of name generation, the mechanics behind trademark screening, and the importance of consumer research, with various guests featured along the way!

Listen to episodes

60 recent
January 8, 2026Episode 14 min

How to Avoid “Name Slop”: Why AI-Generated Names Fail & What to Do About It

"Name slop" warns that AI spits out polished but interchangeable names—repeating familiar patterns and suffixes—which hurts memorability, trust, and raises legal/rebrand risk. People buy meaning, not words; great names must be defensible, pronounceable, discoverable, and able to carry a story. Use AI for ideas and speed, but let humans apply trademark checks, phonetic tests, category clarity, and narrative judgment before choosing.

December 4, 2025Episode 273 min

Why Getting a Trademark Registration Is So Much Harder

In this episode of Naming in the AI Age, Ashley Elliott explains why trademarking a name has become increasingly challenging. Global trademark filings have nearly doubled over the past decade, from 6 million in 2015 to 11.7 million in 2024, with significant concentrations in countries like China and growing activity in emerging markets such as India, which filed roughly 540,000 trademarks in 2024. The rise of e-commerce, especially during COVID, fueled spikes in filings as online-first sellers raced to protect new product lines. This growth in filings has led to more oppositions, monitoring, and marketplace enforcement, making it harder to secure a name. To navigate this complex landscape, Ashley advises focusing on priority markets, selecting distinctive names, filing early, and working with professional or local IP counsel to streamline filings and avoid conflicts. The key takeaway: Name smart and protect early.Disclaimer: We are not attorneys and do not provide legal advice. We always recommend consulting an IP attorney.

November 20, 2025Episode 267 min

DuPont & Polaroid Factors: Infringement and Likelihood of Confusion

Naming a brand requires both creative thinking and an understanding of how trademark examiners and courts evaluate potential conflicts, using frameworks like the USPTO’s DuPont factors and the courts’ Polaroid factors to assess likelihood of confusion. They look at the strength and distinctiveness of existing marks, how similar two names sound or appear, whether the goods or services target the same customers, and whether an established brand might reasonably expand into a new category. Real-world confusion, overlapping marketing channels, how carefully customers make purchase decisions, and any evidence of intentional copying also carry significant weight.Disclaimer: We are not attorneys and do not provide legal advice. We always recommend consulting an IP attorney.

October 24, 2025Episode 2512 min

How to Avoid Getting Sued

In this episode of Naming in the AI Age, Mike Carr and Ashley Elliott discuss how to reduce legal risk in brand naming, using the Smucker’s vs. Trader Joe’s case as an example. They contrast descriptive names like Trader Joe’s Crustless Peanut Butter and Strawberry Jam Sandwiches - clear but hard to protect - with distinctive names like Smucker’s Uncrustables, which are unique and ownable.Mike and Ashley explain that naming strategy should align with business goals: private labels can lean on descriptive names, while national brands need distinctive ones to stand out. They outline a five-step vetting process—from knockout searches to attorney review—and stress that investing in a thorough clearance process builds both legal protection and lasting brand equity.Resources:Smucker's sued Trader Joe'sUSPTOCherubsItzakadoozie

October 16, 2025Episode 244 min

How to Read a USPTO Trademark Regestration

In this episode of Naming in the AI Age, Ashley Elliott explains how to read a USPTO trademark record using Nike as an example. She clarifies that multiple “Nike” entries represent different filings for various product classes, like clothing, footwear, and digital goods. Each record lists the mark, status, goods and services, owner, and registration details. Clicking into a record reveals more specifics—filing and registration dates, serial numbers, and the goods and services description that defines protection scope. Ashley emphasizes that U.S. trademark rights are based on first use, not first filing, and advises focusing on four elements: status, goods and services, key dates, and owner. Mastering these pages, she notes, is vital for anyone naming or protecting a brand.

October 9, 2025Episode 233 min

How To Use Your Trademark Correctly

Using your trademark properly is just as important as registering it. Misuse can weaken protection and even make a mark generic. Trademarks should act as adjectives, not nouns or verbs—say “Nike shoes,” not “Nikes” or “I’ll FedEx this.” Brands that became generic, like Escalator or Aspirin, lost their rights, while companies like Kleenex, Xerox, Google, and FedEx actively fight misuse. From the start, how you present your name shapes customer habits, which is why brands invest in correcting errors. To protect your mark, always use it correctly, educate others, and guard against genericide before it erodes a valuable asset.

September 25, 2025Episode 226 min

Trademark Law and Naming Strategy: Why Distinctive Names Matter

The spectrum of distinctiveness explains why some brand names are stronger than others in trademark protection and branding. Generic terms like “milk” or “bread” can never be protected, while descriptive names such as “Quick Print” are weak unless they gain recognition. Suggestive names like Coppertone or Netflix are inherently distinctive, balancing creativity and clarity. Arbitrary marks like Apple for computers are highly protectable but need marketing to link them to the product. At the top are fanciful names like Kodak or Verizon—completely invented, legally strongest, and iconic with investment. The takeaway: the more distinctive the name, the stronger the protection and brand.Disclaimer: We are not attorneys and do not provide legal advice. We always recommend consulting an IP attorney.

September 11, 2025Episode 214 min

Trademark: What’s the difference between a Knockout Search and a Clearance Search?

When naming a business, product, or service, start with a knockout search—a quick, early check to rule out obvious conflicts and overused patterns while shaping creative direction. Once you’ve narrowed to top contenders, move to a comprehensive search led by an IP attorney. This deeper, time-intensive review uncovers hidden risks that quick checks miss and ensures your chosen name can be legally protected before launch.Disclaimer: We are not attorneys and do not provide legal advice. We always recommend consulting an IP attorney.

September 4, 2025Episode 203 min

Trademark and Copyright Symbols When to use TM, Ⓡ , and ©

This episode explains the difference between trademarks and copyright. The TM symbol signals a claim on a name or logo but offers no legal protection, while the Ⓡ symbol is for USPTO-registered trademarks and carries legal weight. Copyright, on the other hand, protects creative works—books, music, art, software—by covering expression, not brand identity. In short: trademarks protect identity, copyright protects expression.

August 28, 2025Episode 194 min

Understanding Trademark Classes

In this episode of Naming in the AI Age, Ashley Elliott explains trademark classes and why they matter. Trademarks are divided into 45 classes of goods and services, meaning the same name can exist in different classes—like Delta Airlines and Delta Faucets. A common myth is that one filing covers all categories, but protection only applies to the classes you file in. Filing too narrowly leaves gaps; too broadly raises costs and risks conflict. In the U.S., entrepreneurs can file under “Use in Commerce” (already in the market) or “Intent to Use” (reserve rights before launch). The takeaway: strike a balance—protect current needs, plan for growth, and always consult legal counsel.Disclaimer: We are not attorneys and do not provide legal advice. We always recommend consulting an IP attorney.

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