When I created AI Bits & Pieces,
I didn’t start with a keyword list.
It started with memory.
The name came from a magazine my dad bought — Bits and Pieces.
It was always in the shop. I’d flip through it on breaks and between jobs.
It was simply meaningful.
And that decision taught me something important about naming.
A meaning-driven name creates narrative gravity.
People lean in when there’s a story.
Story builds connection before logic ever does.
👉 If you’d like to read the full backstory behind the name, I shared it here: Our Origin Story If you’re building something you plan to grow for years, find a name that has meaning.
Find something that conveys who you are.
Find something that reflects the culture you want to build.
That’s what I did with AI Bits & Pieces. It gave me a story that’s easy to tell, a natural bridge in conversation, and community tone from day one.
People love a good story.
They remember it.
They repeat it.
And there’s a hidden advantage most founders overlook.
A name with legacy can make a company feel more substantial than it actually is.
It signals heritage. It signals depth.
Now here’s the tradeoff.
Meaning-driven names don’t always explain what you do.
They don’t reduce friction immediately.
They require clarity somewhere else.
That clarity usually comes through:
- A strong tagline
- Clear positioning
- Consistent repetition
But if your goal is long-term trust and identity, story compounds.
You can build clarity.
You can build SEO.
You cannot manufacture authenticity.
If you’d like to read the full backstory behind the name, I shared it here:👉 Our Origin Story