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From Starbucks to Sony, famous brands that changed their names

The name game
Google, formerly BackRub
Subway, formerly Pete’s Super Submarines
Blackberry, formerly Research in Motion
Pepsi-Cola, formerly Brad’s Drink
Yahoo, formerly Jerry’s Guide to the World Wide Web
Nintendo, formerly Marufuku Company and Nintendo Playing Card Company
Nissan, formerly Datsun
Panasonic, formerly Matsushita Electric Industrial Corporation
Best Buy, formerly Sound of Music
Nike, formerly Blue Ribbon Sports
AOL, formerly Quantum Computer Services
Starbucks, formerly Starbucks Coffee, Tea and Spice and II Giornale Coffee Company
Sony, formerly Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo
eBay, formerly AuctionWeb
Hertz Rent-A-Car, formerly Drive-Ur-Self
PayPal, formerly Cofinity
Mozilla Firefox, formerly Mozilla Firebird
Sharp, formerly Hayakawa Brothers Shokai
FedEx, formerly Federal Express
MasterCard, formerly Master Charge
Apple Inc, formerly Apple Computers
WW, formerly WeightWatchers
The Campbell's Company, formerly Campbell Soup Company
20 of 24
Philip Pilosian/Shutterstock

FedEx, formerly Federal Express

Federal Express, launched by Yale Graduate Fred Smith in 1965, was designed to do exactly what it still does: deliver urgent, time-sensitive shipments across the world.

In 1994 the company officially adopted FedEx as its new brand name, with the aim of being recognised as the worldwide standard for a fast delivery service. 

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lovemoney staff

17 September 2024

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