
Most people don’t realize that the domain .ai is actually Anguilla’s internet domain.
Back in the 1980s when the internet was new, countries were assigned unique website domains: .us for the United States, .uk for the United Kingdom, and .ai for the small Caribbean island of Anguilla.
Does that name ring a bell?
With the recent rise of artificial intelligence (AI), companies are paying Anguilla to register websites with the .ai tag to brand themselves as AI enterprises. US tech boss Dharmesh Shah spent $700k on you.ai. Anguilla’s internet domain became a jackpot income source for the small island.
This isn’t the first time this happened. Tuvalu, a tiny Pacific island, signed an exclusive deal in 1998 to license its .tv domain to US firm VeriSign for $2 million annually, later rising to $5 million.
3 Business Lessons from Anguilla’s Windfall
1. Your Trivial Assets Might Mean a Lot in the Future
When Anguilla was assigned .ai in the 1980s, nobody anticipated the AI revolution 40 years later. Even if your company has unique attributes that seem irrelevant today, keep them—you might benefit unexpectedly in the future.
Example: NVIDIA
Gamers knew NVIDIA as a GPU designer for commercial games. However, their consistent investment in a unique architectural attribute—parallel processing and their CUDA software environment—positioned them as the backbone of the AI revolution. NVIDIA’s years of nurturing this “unique attribute” transformed them from a gaming company into the fundamental infrastructure of the entire AI industry, catapulting their value and defining a new market.
2. Pivot Your Unique Attributes to Make Them More Unique
Anguilla won big when the AI boom hit. But they made the win bigger by rebranding an obscure national identifier into the global standard for artificial intelligence innovation. This strategic agility in redefining an asset’s core value differentiates those who benefit from serendipity from those who create their own opportunities.
Example: Slack
Slack wasn’t originally created for public use—it began as an internal communication tool for Tiny Speck to coordinate development on a multiplayer game, Glitch. When the game shut down, instead of discarding the tool, the team recognized its unique value: a streamlined, channel-based system superior to email chains and existing chat clients. They pivoted this asset from an internal game dev tool to a global SaaS product, earning billions and fundamentally changing how businesses operate.
3. Capitalize on Your Assets by Securing Them
Companies must secure their assets so they remain accessible during sudden unpredictable situations. The Anguillan government signed a five-year deal with Identity Digital, a US domain registry firm, migrating domains to a resilient global network and eliminating disruption worries during hurricanes.
The Takeaway
The story of Anguilla’s internet domain is quirky but inspiring. In an increasingly turbulent world, the next unexpected opportunity won’t be found in someone else’s domain—it’s hidden in plain sight within your own organization. It could be an unused data set, an internal process, or niche expertise.
The question isn’t if coincidence will happen, but whether you have the foresight to recognize your assets and the foundation to seize opportunities. The time to start building that foundation is now.
At Vintage Management, we provide consultation services to business owners who want to leverage their untapped potential. If that’s you, contact us here for a private discussion.
Related Articles
COVID-19 and Tiktok Durian Livestreaming = 6-figure revenue: How come?
Recent Posts
- Learn from Orchard Road Christmas Light-up
- Thrift Ban at Jakarta’s Pasar Senen: Implications for Indonesia’s Apparel Market
- Hokkaido University 150 Initiative Event
- Lower Blood Glucose with Nature – with Complimentary tasting of Silk Matcha and Protein Powder
- Central Japan Innovation Showcase – A SWITCH 2025 Side Event





