You’re finally ready to launch — maybe it’s your course, podcast, online store, or legal template shop.
But then you hit the question that stumps so many entrepreneurs:
“Do I brand this under my own name… or create something totally separate?”
Spoiler: Either path can work. But your choice affects your brand growth, legal protections, and how your audience connects with you.
Here’s what you need to know before making the leap.
👤 Option 1: Use Your Personal Name
Best for:
✅ Coaches, consultants, freelancers
✅ Personal brands that center around your story or expertise
✅ Entrepreneurs speaking from their own transformation or identity
Pros:
● Builds immediate trust
● Easier to connect if your audience follows you personally
● Makes sense if your services evolve
● Great for media or influencer visibility
Cons:
● Harder to scale or license later
● Tough to sell the business (it’s tied to you!)
● Legal name protection may be limited if your name is common
Example:
SofiaPerez.com — a personal brand offering mentorship for digital creators.
Option 2: Build a Separate Brand Name
Best for:
✅ Scaling with a team
✅ Selling products, templates, or courses that don’t require your face
✅ Creating a business that can outgrow your personal story
Pros:
● Looks more structured and “official”
● Easier to register as a trademark
● You can step back and still generate revenue
● Great for launching multiple products under one brand
Cons:
● Harder to build initial connection
● Requires solid branding strategy
● Takes more upfront planning and research
Example:
Mami Means Business — a scalable brand for legal + tech education for online
entrepreneurs.
Legal Things to Know
● Both personal names and brand names can be trademarked — if they’re unique
● Always check availability on USPTO.gov and social platforms
● Secure the matching .com domain name early
● Add your brand name to contracts, terms of use, and email footers
● If you use your personal name, make sure it’s protected if it becomes known
Can You Combine Both?
Absolutely. This is often the best of both worlds.
Example:
Brand: Mami Means Business
Founder: Sonia Muñoz Gallagher
Use your brand name as the business entity and showcase your personal name for thought leadership, speaking, and connection.
✅ Naming Strategy Checklist
✅ Does the name reflect your vision and what you sell?
✅ Is it legally available for trademark + domain?
✅ Is it easy to spell, remember, and search for?
✅ Can the brand grow with you — or without you?
✅ Does it make you proud (even if you pivot niches)?
Whether you’re the face of your business or building a brand—legal protection is
non-negotiable.
If your business has a name, it needs legal guardrails. That starts with Website Terms of Use: the one page that protects your brand, your content, and your income.
Download our FREE Website Terms of Use Template — plug it into your website and
know you’re covered.
Grab it now and build your brand on a rock-solid foundation