Business
Product Feature Name Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A product feature name generator gives you clear, marketable names for a new capability so it reads well in a changelog, a settings menu, and a sales deck. Choose how many you want and it returns a shuffled set — Smart Sync, Focus Mode, One-Click Export, Flow Builder. Product managers and marketers use it because a good feature name does double duty: it tells users what the thing does and gives marketing something memorable to point at. The strongest names lean on a plain benefit verb or a vivid noun rather than internal jargon, so a customer understands them without a tooltip. Pick a name that matches what the feature actually does, check it does not clash with an existing one, and say it out loud to make sure it survives a support call. Clarity beats cleverness almost every time.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Choose how many feature names you want.
- Generate a set and shortlist ones that fit the feature.
- Check each against your existing feature names.
- Say the favourite out loud before you commit.
Use Cases
- •Naming a new feature for launch
- •Replacing an internal codename with a customer-facing one
- •Filling a changelog or release-notes entry
- •Giving marketing a memorable hook
- •Naming items in a settings or feature menu
Tips
- →Favour clarity over cleverness.
- →Name the benefit or the action where you can.
- →Avoid clashing with an existing feature name.
- →Test it out loud as if on a support call.
FAQ
clear or clever for feature names
Lead with clear. A name that tells the user what the feature does needs no tooltip, while a clever name often does. Save cleverness for when it does not cost comprehension.
how do i test a feature name
Say it out loud as if on a support call, and check it does not clash with an existing feature. If it survives both, it will hold up in docs, menus, and conversations.
should the name describe the benefit
Usually yes. Naming the benefit or the action — Instant Insights, Quick Actions — helps users grasp the value faster than an abstract or invented word would.
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