Have you ever thought about how companies actually get their ticker symbols?
Of course, you can make it as easy as Okta and $OKTA (+0,72%) or just take Meta $META (+0,64%) , $UBER (-0,33%) , $SAP (-0,06%) etc. or you can be clever like Porsche with $P911 (+3,21%) or Salesforce with $CRM (-1,36%) and advertise the product with your own ticker.
But then there are also companies that omit a letter from their name for no reason, such as $BAS (+1,7%) , $PEP (-0,47%) or $TSLA (-2,02%) and there are really crazy ones that simply use $AAPL (-1,39%) instead of $APPLE or $BAYN (-0,95%) instead of $BAYER. Steve Jobs can't tell me that there was nothing better than writing Apple with two A's back then.
And of course there are $AFX (+5,08%) and $KO (-0,45%) the ticker has nothing to do with the actual name.
Finally, there is also the faction that simply uses the classic $C (-1,37%) , $O (+0,03%) , $V (-0,26%) or $F (-1,13%) which at least makes sense because it really is much shorter.