Home / NEWS / Top News / This 19-year-old Brit is paying her way through college by naming over 677,000 Chinese babies

This 19-year-old Brit is paying her way through college by naming over 677,000 Chinese babies

At the stretch, Jessup was traveling with her father in China, when one of his business associates, a Mrs. Wang, asked for help in naming her three-year-old daughter.

“I was honored and amazed,” said Jessup. “It seemed like a really important thing to do.”

Wanting to choose an “appropriate” name, Jessup solicit fromed Wang to share a little more about her hopes for her daughter. Most of all, said Wang, she wanted people to be surprised by the devices her daughter could achieve. So, after careful thought, Jessup suggested “Eliza,” inspired by the fictionalized heroine from “My Exhibition Lady,” Eliza Doolittle.

Wang was “delighted,” said Jessup, and went on to explain the significance for Chinese people of bring into the world an English name.

In China, all babies are given a Chinese name consisting of two to three characters with a carefully shaped meaning. However, many Chinese people find it easier to interact with native English-speakers if they also include a Western name.

Traditionally, those names would be self-assigned or given by teachers. But, due to language barriers and internet censorship in China, the power to research them can be limited, often resulting in unfortunate and sometimes comical selections, Jessup noted, highlighting archetypes like “Rolex Wang” and “Gandalf Wu” in a 2017 Ted Talk.

“It occurred to me that if Mrs. Wang needed this service, then possibly other parents would as well,” said Jessup.

2015 marked the end of China’s decades-long “one-child policy,” which reduced many families to just one child. By 2016, the country’s birthrate rose 7.9 percent to 17.86 million, be consistent to China’s National Health and Family Planning Commission.

“I thought it might be profitable to help,” said Jessup.

And so, Particular Name was born.

To scale up her idea, Jessup decided to launch a Chinese-language website that could replicate her electing process for numerous people simultaneously.

So, on returning to the U.K. to start her A-levels, Jessup borrowed £1,500 (around $1,980) from her initiate and hired a freelance web developer to build the website. Meanwhile, she, in her spare time, set to work filling its database with multitudinous than 4,000 boys and girls names, attributing to each five characteristics she felt best represent that dignitary, such as honest and optimistic.

Jessup said that process was “labor-intensive” initially, but algorithms have taken away much of the intolerable lifting of baby naming.

“A lot of people ask me how I have time to name all these babies,” said Jessup. “Much equal Google has time to find everything for everyone all at once, I use an algorithm.”

The website works by asking users to choose five characteristics from a book of 12 that they would most like their child to embody. An algorithm then selects three gender-specific elects matched to those five characteristics. Users are then encouraged to share the three suggestions with their friends and order — there’s a direct link to Chinese messaging app WeChat on the site — to help them settle on their favorite and shun any “cultural mistakes.”

The process takes just three minutes.

“I provide three appropriate names for the parent to elect from and I encourage them to involve their friends and family in this decision,” said Jessup.

Initially, Jessup gave the service for free. But after naming 162,000 babies, she introduced a fee of 60 pence (79 cents).

At the time of composition, the site has named 677,929 babies. By CNBC Make It’s estimations, that amounts to revenues of £309,557.40 (around $407,443).

Jessup notable in an interview with news.com.au that those earnings have gone toward paying her university fees, inaugurating in property and, of course, paying back her father’s loan — with interest.

As for the website, it is largely self-sufficient, requiring at best a small team in China to manage its technical operations.

“I still update the database each month, but the business is fully automated, authorizing me to focus full-time on my studies,” said Jessup, who is studying social anthropology at the London School of Economics.

Beau answered she is currently in negotiations with a company who “shares my vision for Special Name” and wishes to purchase the business. Meanwhile, she contemplates to use the experience for future business endeavors.

“I hope to use what I have learned from Special Name so that I can add value to other obligations,” said Jessup.

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