A clear-eyed look at modernising your customer-facing communications — putting a warmer, more memorable handle like keepingyouwarm.uk on the vans and signage, alongside jprcombustions.co.uk. Every angle, the real numbers, and an honest recommendation.
JPR Combustions has spent years building something most trades never achieve: a recognised name with a real reputation, five vans on the road, and around 400 jobs a month flowing through it. The question on the table is whether a name like jprcombustions.co.uk — a perfectly good 2005-era trade name — still does that reputation justice in a world where customers find, judge and recommend tradespeople on their phones. A warmer, more human name like “Keeping You Warm” feels more like how people actually talk about heating, and it would look far stronger on a van.
The honest answer the evidence points to is “yes — but not by throwing anything away.” A consumer-friendly name is a genuine opportunity for memorability and kerbside impact. But the part of your business that actually wins you new work — your Google listing, your reviews, your years of search history — is all attached to the name JPR Combustions. The smartest, lowest-risk version is beautifully simple: put one clean address on the vans and workwear — keepingyouwarm.uk — and let it forward straight to your existing site. The JPR Combustions name stays where it belongs: on business cards, email addresses and invoices, as the web domain itself, and on your Google listing. Each name has one job and they never share a surface, so a customer is never confused — and because nothing actually moves, nothing resets. This report walks through why, what’s available, what it costs, what it risks, and exactly how it works.
How people find, choose and recommend a heating engineer in 2025/2026 — and why it’s changed.
Twenty years ago a heating firm’s name lived in the Yellow Pages and on the side of a van, and a website address was just a formality. Today the journey is almost entirely on a phone, and it runs through three things: a name people remember, a Google listing they can tap, and reviews they trust. A web name like jprcombustions.co.uk still works — but it reads as a company filing, not a brand. It’s a touch corporate and a touch dated, where the category is moving toward warm, plain-English names.
Vehicle livery is the most cost-effective advertising a local firm owns. Industry data from 3M puts fleet graphics at as little as $0.15 per thousand impressions (versus up to ~$21 for online ads), with a single liveried vehicle generating 30,000–70,000 impressions a day, and Nielsen research finding 64% of people notice vehicle graphics. The critical nuance: people almost never type a URL they saw on a van. They remember the name and Google it later. That single fact reshapes the whole decision — a consumer name’s job is to be memorable and easy to say, then point cleanly at your Google presence. “Keeping You Warm” is far easier to recall in traffic than “JPR Combustions.”
The “my mate had a good plumber” conversation hasn’t disappeared; it’s moved into WhatsApp threads, local Facebook groups, and — above all — Google reviews. BrightLocal’s long-running Local Consumer Review Survey finds the vast majority of people read reviews before choosing a local business, and a large share trust them nearly as much as a personal recommendation. When someone is recommended “JPR” in a Facebook group, the next thing they do is search the name and read the stars. Whatever name is on the van has to lead back to the same trusted listing — which is exactly why JPR stays in the picture.
Look at how the category’s biggest players name themselves — Hive, Nest, BOXT, Octopus, Heatable, Hometree. None are surnames; all are short, warm and human. That works because it’s emotionally inviting and instantly memorable. The honest caveat for a five-van firm: those brands spent millions teaching the country what their invented names mean. A local installer can borrow the warmth of that approach — but a brand-new name on its own carries no trust until it’s tied to something people already recognise. Which is the whole argument for keeping JPR as the anchor.
Checked live against the Nominet (.uk) registry on 14 June 2026. UK domains cost roughly £8–£12 a year.
| Domain | Availability | Approx. cost | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| keepingyouwarm.uk | Available | ~£8–12/yr | Strong — top pick |
| keepingyouwarm.co.uk | Taken (reg. 2016, parked) | — | Unavailable |
| keepingyouwarm.com | Taken (parked) | — | Unavailable |
| keepyouwarm.uk / .co.uk | Available | ~£8–12/yr | Viable — shorter |
| jprheating.uk / .co.uk | Available | ~£8–12/yr | Strong — keeps JPR, says what you do |
| jprheat.uk / .co.uk | Available | ~£8–12/yr | Viable — punchier |
| warmhomesiow.uk | Available | ~£8–12/yr | Viable — local angle |
The real arguments on both sides — not platitudes.
Memorability wins on a van. Customers remember rather than type — “Keeping You Warm” sticks after a two-second glance where three initials and “Combustions” don’t.
Warmth over jargon. It speaks to the outcome the customer wants, not the mechanics. That’s why Hive, Nest and Hometree chose human names.
It travels through word-of-mouth. “Call the Keeping You Warm lot” is easier to pass on in a WhatsApp thread than a string of letters.
It’s shareable & future-proof. A warm van wrap gets noticed locally, and the name stretches if JPR ever moves beyond gas and boilers.
A new name carries no trust yet. On its own it can feel like a different, unproven company — until it’s tied to the JPR reputation customers already know.
Don’t touch the Google listing. Renaming your Google Business Profile to a completely new name is treated by Google as a new business — risking your reviews and ranking. (The plan below avoids this entirely.)
Physical rebrand has a cost. Full van wraps run ~£800–£2,500 each, plus workwear, signage and stationery — which is why we phase it.
Half-done is worse than not done. New name on the van but no link back to a trusted, reviewed listing just confuses people.
The mechanism is genuinely simple — and that’s the point.
You don’t build a second website or move anything. keepingyouwarm.uk is registered purely as a memorable handle and set to forward — a permanent (301) redirect — straight to your existing site at jprcombustions.co.uk, which stays the real home and holds the new website. jprcombustions.co.uk remains exactly that — the web domain you keep on business cards, email addresses and invoices. The slogan name is simply the friendly front door that points to it: a signpost, not a second house.
In UK law none of this needs a new company. You keep the registered name JPR Combustions Ltd and simply trade publicly under a business name — the legal name just has to stay on invoices and the website footer, which is standard. Some of the most recognisable names in the trade are built exactly this way.
One line on the van does two jobs at once.
Most firms need a tagline and a web address. Here they’re the same three words — so the van carries just one clean line: keepingyouwarm.uk. No second name, no clutter, nothing to confuse a passing glance. It reads as a promise and a web address in a single breath, and it’s the only thing anyone needs to remember.
Vans · workwear · signage · social. One address only — keepingyouwarm.uk. Clean, single, memorable. The old web name never appears here.
Business cards · email addresses · invoices · the website domain · your Google listing. All stay JPR Combustions / jprcombustions.co.uk — the registered, reviewed, searchable name.
The two names never share a surface — so there’s nothing to confuse a customer. The slogan domain simply forwards to the real one behind the scenes.
The agreed first move: the new name on the side of the van now — integrate the rest slowly.
Real UK firms that took these routes.
The textbook case of branding a trade — red-and-blue “hot and cold” vans, personalised plates, uniformed engineers. Founder Charlie Mullins credits the recognisable brand as the growth engine; it became the most recognisable plumbers in the UK and was acquired by Neighborly in 2021. Livery and a memorable identity were the strategy, not decoration.
Three UK heating brands that chose short, human names over surnames and won on memorability plus reviews — Heatable alone carries 14,000+ five-star Trustpilot reviews. Hometree extends the friendly name into care plans, relevant if JPR adds recurring maintenance revenue. Warm names work in heating specifically — but they’re carried by strong reviews.
Both prove a memorable consumer brand can sit cleanly on top of separate operating companies — Dyno-Rod runs across 50+ franchisees trading under the brand, not their own names. The “one public brand, separate legal entity” model is normal, proven and low-friction — exactly this plan.
The Recommendation
Grab keepingyouwarm.uk now (it’s available, ~£10, and the matching .co.uk/.com are already gone — so don’t sit on it) and forward it to your existing site. Put it where it does the most work for the least money: as the single, clean address on the vans and workwear, where it doubles as your slogan — no second name alongside it. The JPR Combustions name stays on business cards, email, invoices and your Google listing, and remains the web domain everything forwards to. The rest follows at your own pace.
Keep JPR Combustions exactly where it earns its keep — as your legal name and your Google listing, where the reviews and search history live. Add the warmth on top. Don’t throw the equity away to get it.
This captures the real prize — a name people remember and pass on — while completely sidestepping the one thing that costs money: resetting your Google presence. It’s the route the most recognisable names in the trade took, it phases to suit cashflow, and it’s reversible if it doesn’t land. Secure the domain this week; put it on the van first; phase the rest over the coming months.
Domain availability checked live against the Nominet (.uk) WHOIS registry, 14 June 2026. Figures from company/press sources are indicative and may move over time.