Why Got Messy
wins for non-tech users
Every other AI tool name tells you what it does. Got Messy names what the user already feels before they open the app.
Non-technical people don't think "I need to optimise my prompt." They think: "I have a pile of notes and I don't know how to start." Got Messy meets them there.
Three things a great brand name must do
"Got Messy" = I have a mess. User is already nodding.
Two casual words. Conversational cadence. Sticks instantly.
The mess exists. The resolution is implied. The brand is the bridge.
Use for: website, email sig, Google Docs letterhead.
Use for: dark decks, social covers, app splash.
Use for: app icon, favicon, social avatar, pitches.
Warm, human, slightly imperfect. No cold blues or sterile greys. Every colour should feel like it could exist in a physical notebook.
Type Rules
- Headlines — Lora 600–700, title case
- Taglines — Lora 400 italic
- Body copy — Poppins 400, 14–16px
- Labels & caps — Poppins 600, letter-spaced
- Never use Inter, Roboto, or system-ui
- Never all-caps for body sentences
What the type says
Lora's italic weight looks like handwriting cleaned up — which mirrors exactly what the app does for its users. It has warmth and weight; it feels like a human chose it, not a default. Poppins pairs it with clarity without coldness.
The Brand Personality
Got Messy sounds like a brilliant friend who happens to be great with words. Not a tutor. Not a robot. Not a hustle-culture coach.
Do Say / Don't Say
All marketing
Email campaigns
Sit on it for now
Every name is a verb or a casual phrase — the way a non-technical person would actually describe what they're trying to do.
Paste anything.
Notes, emails, ideas,
half-baked drafts.
Let's decode it.
Paste the output you loved here...