This much we know!
Should you choose one of the popular top 50 names or go for a more unusual one?
Chloe, Jack, Grace are really lovely names. No one will have any problem spelling them or pronouncing them. When you want to buy personalised pens or stickers or mugs or bedroom door signs there will be loads to choose from. No one will ask you why you chose that name or whether there's a family connection.
I was named Clare in 1967, it was a popular name. I was always in a class with at least 2 other Clare or Claires, so I was never known just as Clare always Clare S. All my friends know at least 2 other Clares so even when I'd left college I was, and continue to be Clare-from-Northampton / Clare-Briony's mum etc. Clare, although a common name, luckily hasn't got the same negative image that Sharon or Tracey seem to have acquired. Those were both unusual and pretty names once but now if you say your name is Tracey people are already forming an opinion about you.
It will be easier for people to remember your name. People might not know anyone else with the same name and so will have no preconceived ideas about what sort of person you are.
I did not consider any of the possible down sides to naming my children Briony and Aneurin. However, as soon as they were born people were mis-spelling their names and pronouncing them wrongly. People were always asking why we'd chosen a Welsh name, and asking what our Welsh roots were, (we have none). It took the children a long time to learn to spell their names and not many of their friends can spell them. There is never any personalised item available in shops with either of their names on and they don't understand why.