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Marketing Agency Name Generator

Your marketing agency name is the first piece of marketing you'll ever produce — it has to demonstrate the very judgment your clients are hiring you for. A generic name filled with "media" and "solutions" signals the opposite of what you're selling. Build your shortlist here and grab the .com before your pitch deck is done.

Add a word or two about your idea, or just hit Hatch. Click any name to check the domain.

Found one you love? Design a matching logo with Looka →

What makes a great marketing agency name?

Marketing agency names that earn premium clients tend to be short, confident, and notably free of the word "marketing." Think about your positioning: are you a growth agency, a brand studio, a performance shop, a content operation? The name should hint at your angle without describing the service directly. One strong word or a tight two-word pairing almost always outperforms a three-word name with "group," "co.," or "solutions" appended.

6 tips for naming your marketing agency

Marketing Agency naming FAQ

How do I name my marketing agency?
Think about the result your clients are hiring you to deliver — growth, clarity, reach, story — and find a name that projects that outcome with confidence. Avoid descriptors of the service itself. Generate a shortlist, test each as a Google-searched agency name, and confirm the .com and LinkedIn company page are available.
Should a marketing agency name include "marketing" or "media"?
Almost never. Including the service in the name signals a lack of the differentiation that marketing clients are literally paying you to provide. The best agency names are bold, distinctive, and say nothing about what the agency does — the work makes that argument.
Does the agency name matter for winning clients?
Significantly. A strong, distinctive name with a matching .com and consistent social presence is the first signal of credibility before a prospect reads your case studies. Conversely, a generic name buried in search results behind ten competitors means your cold outreach lands in a lower-trust context.
Should I name the agency after myself?
It works well when your personal reputation is the reason clients hire you — common in PR and branding. For a growth-focused or team-based agency, a standalone name is usually more scalable, easier to build a team identity around, and doesn't create complications if you bring in partners or sell.

More name ideas