Why we picked it Neumeier's short, visual classic is the foundational reading for thinking clearly about how a brand and its products relate, which is exactly the ground under a name-them-together-or-apart decision. It frames a brand as a person's gut feeling about a product or company, which reframes naming as a question of what associations you want to build and protect rather than just what sounds good. You can read it in about two hours, so it is a low-cost way to build the mental model before you commit to a naming structure.
The Brand Gap: How to Bridge the Distance Between Business Strategy and Design
From Marty Neumeier by Marty Neumeier About a 2 hour read (roughly 200 pages, visual format)
- A brand is the gut feeling people have about you, so naming is really about which associations you want to grow or keep separate.
- Neumeier's five disciplines (differentiation, collaboration, innovation, validation, cultivation) give you a structured way to reason about brand and product decisions.
- It is deliberately short and visual, so it is a fast way to build the vocabulary before making a naming architecture call.