Change Your Name
Paul Graham advises startups that if you have a US startup called X and don't own x.com, you should probably change your name. The reason is not just discoverability but signaling weakness; a marginal domain suggests a marginal company. Founders are in denial due to identity and lack of imagination: they overestimate their name's intrinsic value and underestimate their ability to find better ones. Graham suggests acknowledging that naming is a separate skill and that many cheap or untaken domain pairs exist, as Stripe demonstrated. Data from YC: 100% of top 20 companies by valuation have the matching .com, 94% of top 50, but only 66% of the current batch. Fixing this takes discipline and a couple of days.
If you have a US startup called X and you don't have x.com, you should probably change your name.
The reason is not just that people can't find you. For companies with mobile apps, especially, having the right domain name is not as critical as it used to be for getting users. The problem with not having the .com of your name is that it signals weakness. Unless you're so big that your reputation precedes you, a marginal domain suggests you're a marginal company. Whereas (as Stripe shows) having x.com signals strength even if it has no relation to what you do.
Even good founders can be in denial about this. Their denial derives from two very powerful forces: identity, and lack of imagination.
X is what we are, founders think. There's no other name as good. Both of which are false.
You can fix the first by stepping back from the problem. Imagine you'd called your company something else. If you had, surely you'd be just as attached to that name as you are to your current one. The idea of switching to your current name would seem repellent.
[1] Incidentally, this thought experiment works for nationality and religion too.
[2] The liking you have for a name that has become part of your identity manifests itself not directly, which would be easy to discount, but as a collection of specious beliefs about its intrinsic qualities. (This too is true of nationality and religion as well.)
即使是优秀的创始人也可能对此视而不见。他们的否认源于两股强大的力量:身份认同和缺乏想象力。
“X 就是我们,”创始人想,“没有其他名字能这么好。”这两点都错了。
你可以通过后退一步来化解第一个问题。想象一下你当初用了别的名字。如果是那样,你一定会对那个名字像现在这样眷恋。而换成现在这个名字的想法则会让你反感。
[1] 顺便说,这个思想实验对国籍和宗教也同样适用。
[2] 你对一个已成为你身份一部分的名字的喜爱,不会直接表现出来——那样容易被打消——而是以一堆看似有理的关于其内在品质的信念出现。(这对国籍和宗教也是如此。)
There's nothing intrinsically great about your current name. Nearly all your attachment to it comes from it being attached to you.
The way to neutralize the second source of denial, your inability to think of other potential names, is to acknowledge that you're bad at naming. Naming is a completely separate skill from those you need to be a good founder. You can be a great startup founder but hopeless at thinking of names for your company.
Once you acknowledge that, you stop believing there is nothing else you could be called. There are lots of other potential names that are as good or better; you just can't think of them.
你现在的名字本身并没有什么了不起。你对它的依恋几乎全部来自于它与你的关联。
化解第二个否认根源(你无法想到其他潜在名字)的方法是承认你不擅长取名。取名与成为优秀创始人所需的其他技能完全独立。你可以是一个伟大的初创公司创始人,但在为公司想名字方面却一塌糊涂。
一旦你承认这一点,你就不会再相信没有别的名字可用。有大量其他潜在名字一样好甚至更好;你只是想不到它们而已。
How do you find them? One answer is the default way to solve problems you're bad at: find someone else who can think of names. But with company names there is another possible approach. It turns out almost any word or word pair that is not an obviously bad name is a sufficiently good one, and the number of such domains is so large that you can find plenty that are cheap or even untaken. So make a list and try to buy some. That's what Stripe did. (Their search also turned up parse.com, which their friends at Parse took.)
The reason I know that naming companies is a distinct skill orthogonal to the others you need in a startup is that I happen to have it. Back when I was running YC and did more office hours with startups, I would often help them find new names. 80% of the time we could find at least one good name in a 20 minute office hour slot.
Now when I do office hours I have to focus on more important questions, like what the company is doing. I tell them when they need to change their name. But I know the power of the forces that have them in their grip, so I know most won't listen.
你怎么找到它们?一个答案是解决你不擅长问题的默认方式:找一个能想出名字的人。但对于公司名字,还有另一种可能的方法。事实证明,几乎任何不是明显差劲的单词或单词组合都足够好,而且这样的域名数量之多,以至于你可以找到很多便宜甚至无人注册的。所以列个清单,试着买一些。这正是 Stripe 所做的。(他们还在搜索中找到了 parse.com,后来被他们的朋友 Parse 公司拿走。)
我之所以知道取名字是一项与初创公司所需其他技能正交的独特技能,是因为我恰好拥有它。以前我管理 YC 并花更多时间与初创公司面谈时,经常帮他们找新名字。80% 的情况下,我们能在 20 分钟的面谈时段里找到至少一个好名字。
现在我做面谈时,必须专注于更重要的问题,比如公司做什么。我会告诉他们何时需要改名。但我知道控制着他们的力量有多强大,所以我明白大多数人都不会听。
There are of course examples of startups that have succeeded without having the .com of their name. There are startups that have succeeded despite any number of different mistakes. But this mistake is less excusable than most. It's something that can be fixed in a couple days if you have sufficient discipline to acknowledge the problem.
100% of the top 20 YC companies by valuation have the .com of their name. 94% of the top 50 do. But only 66% of companies in the current batch have the .com of their name. Which suggests there are lessons ahead for most of the rest, one way or another.
[3] Sometimes founders know it's a problem that they don't have the .com of their name, but delusion strikes a step later in the belief that they'll be able to buy it despite having no evidence it's for sale. Don't believe a domain is for sale unless the owner has already told you an asking price.
当然也有初创公司没有 .com 域名却成功的例子。不少初创公司尽管犯了各种错误,仍然成功了。但这个错误比大多数更不可原谅。如果你有足够的纪律承认问题,它可以在一两天内修复。
估值排名前 20 的 YC 公司中,100% 拥有其名字的 .com 域名。前 50 名中,94% 拥有。但在当前这批公司中,只有 66% 拥有名字对应的 .com。这暗示着其余大多数公司迟早会学到教训。
[3] 有时创始人知道自己没有 .com 域名是个问题,但妄想接着出现——他们相信能买到它,尽管毫无证据表明它在出售。除非域名所有者已经告诉你要价,否则不要相信域名在出售。