ChatterBank2 mins ago
Help With A Company Name
5 Answers
Hi all
I hope I am posting this in right place. I have an inoperable brain tumour but with 10 years recruitment experience I am setting up my own recruitment firm and am reaching to sharper brains than me to come up with a company name.
I intend on using my story re tumour in press for the firm so brain/head names welcome. This company will be just me working from home and will focus on IT recruitment alone
Other style names I like are aspirational names like ClearSky (taken) or Eden taken)
Thanks to all
Regards
Mike
I hope I am posting this in right place. I have an inoperable brain tumour but with 10 years recruitment experience I am setting up my own recruitment firm and am reaching to sharper brains than me to come up with a company name.
I intend on using my story re tumour in press for the firm so brain/head names welcome. This company will be just me working from home and will focus on IT recruitment alone
Other style names I like are aspirational names like ClearSky (taken) or Eden taken)
Thanks to all
Regards
Mike
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by FawltyAdder. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Core Tete. My thinking is you have a core/corps of top professionals who all use their head(tete in French) to get ahead in business, plus Core Tete sounds very similar to quartet and you want your business to reach all four corners of the global map(metaphorically speaking!)
Sorry to hear about your medical status.
Sorry to hear about your medical status.
NewBrains [sic]? Brainwork? Brainworkers?
You could always have an off-the shelf, ready made company and use "[its name] trading as [whatever you like]" That's less restrictive but still subject to the rule that whatever you trade as must not be likely to be confused with an existing business. Since the Registration of Business Names Act is now long gone, finding existing trading names which might be confused with your choice is not as easy as it was, but a bit of common sense and general knowledge should suffice.
You could always have an off-the shelf, ready made company and use "[its name] trading as [whatever you like]" That's less restrictive but still subject to the rule that whatever you trade as must not be likely to be confused with an existing business. Since the Registration of Business Names Act is now long gone, finding existing trading names which might be confused with your choice is not as easy as it was, but a bit of common sense and general knowledge should suffice.