Arm’s stock is up 60% today. Igor named their products.

The gain raises Arm’s valuation to $123 billion. How many of those billions resulted from Igor naming their four latest and greatest products? It’s hard to say with certainty, but what in life is certain? What’s unquestionable is that Arm trusts Igor as their naming agency of record.

CNBC: “Shares of chip designer Arm soared more than 60% on Thursday after the chip design company reported better-than-expected earnings and issued a strong profit forecast for the current quarter. The stock surge added about $46.8 billion to Arm’s market cap, with more than $42 billion of that accruing to SoftBank, which owns 90% of the company.”

Arm Case Studies.

Worst New Brand Name of 2023: “Solventum”, 3M’s $8 Billion Healthcare Spinoff

An $8 billion healthcare spinoff gets a caustic new name:

The brand naming brief must have called for a cold, distant, uncaring, inhuman, faceless megacorp, dark void vibe. A bold choice for a healthcare company.

3M explains the meaningless name because otherwise, you’d only have its toxic personality to go on: “The name of the company is a combination of “solving” and “momentum,” according to Bryan Hanson, chief executive officer of 3M Health Care Business Group.”

“Solving” and “momentum” are concepts so generic that any company, from Ford to Zoom, would sign off on them – they aren’t specific to the new company. They are no more exciting or distinctive than “growth” + “solution” = Grolution, or “triumph” + “succeed” = Triceed. Or “solvent” + “um” = Solventum.

Landor used to be the go-to agency for lifeless constructions like this, having named Ilimity, Enactus, Magotan, and Centravis, but another agency has filched their manky crown. When a naming or branding agency sells a client on a name by smushing together generic terms that create a negative asset, that process is called The Happy Idiot.