The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Lawyers and judges often ask, as did the playwright, “What’s in a name?” Scholastic Sys., Inc. v. LeLoup, 307 So.2d 166, 171 (Fla.1974); Brazeal v. Redburn, 638 S.W.2d 771, 772 (Mo.App.1982); Farmers Ins. Co. v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co., 613 S.W.2d 158, 161 (Mo.App.1981). Apparently a lot. At least, a lot of people think so. In this case, three attorneys seek to use their individual names to designate their professional association.
“Weiss, Healey & Rea” is the name under which an association of eight attorneys, all of whom are full-time employees of an insurance company, conducts business in Mount Holly, New Jersey. The record does not disclose whether their office is in the same building as the insurance company’s. Joseph Weiss, characterized by petitioners as the “senior partner” of the group, is the insurance company’s Regional Manager for Legal Services in New Jersey. In this capacity, he establishes office management policies and procedures, performs personnel planning and budgetary functions for the office, and handles some trial work. James Healey is the insurance company’s senior trial attorney and heads a litigation team that handles the trial work in the southern portion of New Jersey. The third attorney, Thomas Rea, is the supervisor of a litigation team that handles all of the insurance company’s trial work in the central part of the State. He also engages in the daily management of the office in the absence of Mr. Weiss.
The attorneys devote their time exclusively to the defense of the insurance company’s insureds. Within the association, they cover for each other at pretrial and trial stages. They also share in strategy decisions. However, as full-time employees of the insurance company, the attorneys are not permitted to *249represent members of the general public other than their own close relatives.
Petitioners share no profits or losses from their insurance-related activities. There is no written agreement among the eight attorneys, and all expenses incurred from the representation of the insureds are paid by the insurance company.
Petitioners requested an opinion from the Advisory Committee on Professional Ethics (ACPE) concerning the propriety of their use of the name, “Weiss, Healey & Rea.” The ACPE held that the use of this name is proscribed by Rule of Professional Conduct (RPC) 7.5(d). Opinion 593, 118 N.J.L.J. 580 (1986).1 The Committee stated that “attorneys who are not partners may not combine their names for an office designation that implies a partnership practice.” Id. at 592. In their view, an invitation to partnership, as the most “appropriate means of recognizing achievements of professional staff,” implies the respect of existing partners for an associate’s skills, “sense of responsibility^] and commitment to the practice of law.” Id. Thus, Opinion 593 rejects as impractical, misleading, and inappropriate any attempt “to rebut the inference of partnership” by adding, at the end of the series of names that designates the firm, such disclaimers as “an association of attorneys”; “an association of attorneys, not a partnership”; “in house counsel for A.B. Corp.”; and “litigation attorneys for policyholders of A.B. Corp.” Id.
We granted the attorneys’ petition for review of the ACPE’s opinion. 107 N.J. 166 (1987). The New Jersey State Bar Association submitted an amicus brief supporting the ACPE. The American Insurance Association, whose membership consists of over 172 insurance companies, most of whom are *250licensed to do business in New Jersey, filed an amicus brief arguing for reversal of ACPE Opinion 593. Because the problem posed extends beyond the eight attorneys in petitioners’ group, we shall use the letters “A, B & C” as a generic shorthand for similar designations.
Preliminarily, we note that the question before us is not whether an insurer may provide in-house counsel for its insured. See Use of House Counsel by Insurance Companies to Defend Insureds, Opinion No. 23 of the Committee on the Unauthorized Practice of Law, 114 N.J.L.J. 421 (1984). Nor is the question whether the traditional form of partnership practice is the only manner in which legal services may be rendered. See In re Education Law Center, Inc., 86 N.J. 124 (1981) (public interest law firm organized as a corporation is not engaged in unauthorized practice of law); and Rule 1:21-1A (attorneys may form professional corporations to engage in the practice of law). Rather, the question is how the form of association involved here may be designated.
In recent examinations of proposed firm names, we have attempted to clarify the relationships between the private and public interests involved. Firm names, like trade names, are forms of commercial speech. Opinion 475, 89 N.J. 74, 82-83 n. 2 (1982).2 As such, their use enjoys constitutional protection “only to the extent that it conveys facts which facilitate honest commercial transactions.” Id. at 83. In Opinion 475, supra, 89 N.J. at 82, we found that because Leonard Jacoby and Stephen Meyers had never been licensed to practice in New Jersey, the name “Jacoby & Meyers” constituted a deceptive trade name when used in connection with legal services offered *251by New Jersey attorneys.3
“Under our rules, law firm names are ‘official’ designations, and therefore are regulated more carefully than [the commercial speech in] ordinary advertising.” Opinion 475, supra, 89 N.J. at 87. When we seek “simply to ensure that the official status of an attorney as one licensed to practice in New Jersey is conveyed with accuracy and clarity, there can be no doubt about the validity of a rule proscribing deceptive law firm names.” Id. at 87-88.
Of course, the issue here is not status to practice but rather status under which to practice. The function that a firm name has in conveying status of association to practice is akin to the secondary meaning of a trade name described in the Minority Report of the Committee on Attorney Advertising:
The minority believes that the public puts little stock today in the name of a law firm except insofar as that name is a symbol of the kind and caliber of legal services rendered, [emphasis added] It is this secondary meaning that is paramount. Thus, it is the advertising which creates this secondary meaning *252that must be regulated and scrutinized to assure that the public is not misled or deceived about the prices and quality of legal services. [Supplement to N.J. L.J., May 5, 1983, at 14.]
The question here is whether there is anything deceptive about the use of a name like “A, B & C” to describe the association of attorney employees of an insurance company. We believe that it is evident that the mere use of the name “A, B & C” does not convey “with accuracy and clarity” the complex set of relationships that distinguish an association of attorneys representing a single insurer and its policy-holders from an association of attorneys affiliated for the general practice of law. Yet, what secondary meaning does this form of firm name convey to the public? What does it tell us about the “kind and caliber” of legal services rendered by such an association?
We believe that the message conveyed by the firm name “A, B & C” is that the three persons designated are engaged in the general practice of law in New Jersey as partners. Such partnership implies the full financial and professional responsibility of a law firm that has pooled its resources of intellect and capital to serve a general clientele. The partnership arrangement implies much more than office space shared by representatives of a single insurer. Put differently, the designation “A, B & C” does not imply that the associated attorneys are in fact employees, with whatever inferences a client might draw about their ultimate interest and advice. The public, we believe, infers that the collective professional, ethical, and financial responsibility of a partnership-in-fact bespeaks the “kind and caliber of legal services rendered.”4
As noted, however, the members of petitioners’ group are in fact paid by one insurer to provide legal services only to it and *253its policy-holders. We realize that in this limited context, they will not ordinarily encounter problems of conflict of interest; in almost all cases, the interests of both the insurer and the policy-holder will coincide.5
But lawyers in general practice, except when they have limited their practices, would provide a broader approach to a client’s problems. They would not limit their concern to the insurance aspects of the litigation. This record does not establish how attorneys acting as house counsel would approach a multifaceted situation, nor does it establish whether they would be permitted to advise policy-holders with respect to various affiliated matters arising out of the policy-holders’ transactions with the carrier. These may be concerns more fanciful than real: we suspect that in the vast majority of cases the attorneys will be able to decide clearly whether the carrier’s interests may diverge from the clients’. See, e.g., ACPE Opinion 527, 113 N.J.L.J 384 (1984) (firm retained by insurance company represented both defendant physician and defendant hospital in medical malpractice action); Opinion 405, 102 N.J.L.J. 297 (1978) (labor organization attorney representing individual members); Opinion 362, 100 N.J.L.J. 1 (1977) (representing both labor union and individual member).
We recognize that these problems are intrinsic to the house-counsel form of practice, whether that practice is denominated by the name of an individual lead counsel or by the names of co-counsel. Such problems frequently arise when outside counsel represent almost exclusively a single insurer. However, we believe that the clients of in-house counsel should have a full *254understanding of the kind and caliber of legal services that they are receiving.
Thus, we are not satisfied on this record that there is sufficient reason to depart from RPC 7.5(d). Accordingly, we affirm the ACPE’s ruling that the choice of name violates the rule as it now stands. Nonetheless, we recognize the genuine interest of the petitioners in being permitted to practice under a name that they believe reflects the nature of their association. By expressing their association in terms more akin to those of attorneys in other firms designated as partnerships, petitioners would gain the obvious benefits not only of public esteem but also of self-esteem. These are not second-class lawyers; these are first-class lawyers who are delivering legal services in an evolving format.6 If this form of practice results in lower legal costs, the public has an interest in seeing that able attorneys continue to be attracted to it.
The State Bar Association has suggested a disclaimer to petitioners’ firm name to state that petitioners are employed by the insurer. While, as noted above, Opinion 593, supra, 118 N.J.L.J. 580, generally rejects disclaimers of partnership, it may well be that a less burdensome statement would adequately convey “with accuracy and clarity” the nature, the quality, and the caliber of petitioners’ practice. The difficulty in fashioning an appropriate disclaimer is that the more accurately it conveys the relationship of the associates to the insurer, the less valu*255able it may become to them. Still, we believe that nothing but benefit can be obtained by remitting to a special Supreme Court committee the question of whether we can accommodate the admitted interests of the petitioners by allowing them to communicate the genuineness of their association, while at the same time signifying, without deprecation, the true relationship that they have with their employer. We have used the format of committee study to accommodate the Jacoby & Meyers issues, see Opinion 475, supra, 89 N.J. 74, 79 (remand to special Supreme Court Committee), and other problems of practice, see, e.g., IMO ACPE Opinion #545, 102 N.J. 339 (1985) (remand to ACPE to develop better record on conflict between local board and regional board).
The record developed with the pooled experience and wisdom of such a committee will help us to evaluate the fine-tuning of the RPC that might allow appropriate designations of such associations. Some of the questions that may be more fully developed in such a setting would include:
1. The extent to which such names lead to misunderstanding, misrepresentation, and deception vis-a-vis the assureds and other counsel, and other harmful effects, if any. For example, how would assureds evaluate advice that private counsel might be needed in particular contexts?
2. What are the benefits, public or private, that will accrue from the approval of alternate designations? In this context, what is the history of the use of such designations in New Jersey and elsewhere?
3. What alternatives may be suggested to accomodate the public’s interest in being free of the risk of deception in receiving legal services, and the attorneys’ private interest in being free to designate their affiliation by the name they choose?
4. What collateral consequences will flow from such changes? Will approval of the designation “A, B & C” or alternatives dilute public perceptions of the established usage *256of such names? Will these changes be applicable to other in-house counsel situations, such as those of major business entities?
ACPE Opinion 593 is affirmed. We will remand the issue of appropriate alternative designations, if any, to a special Supreme Court committee for its report and recommendations. We shall not require that the petitioners cease to use the name during the period of our further review, provided that adequate disclosure is made to clients, court, and counsel.
For affirmance and remandment — Chief Justice WILENTZ, and Justices HANDLER, POLLOCK, O’HERN, GARIBALDI and STEIN — 6.
Dissenting — Justice CLIFFORD — 1.