Type the word "school" into any browser on earth and you are holding one of the last truly self-explanatory addresses on the internet. No explanation, no tagline, no marketing budget required — the name does the work that other companies spend hundreds of millions trying to buy.
Education is a $6-trillion global industry navigated, mostly, through fragments: a district site from 2009 here, a rankings listicle there, a course platform with a made-up name that parents can't pronounce. The demand has never been more enormous. The front door has never been built.
The best domains don't describe a business. They are the business.
Cars found their address. Hotels found theirs. Booking a flight, buying a home, finding a job — each of those journeys eventually consolidated behind one obvious name. The journey of learning, the one every human being takes, is still waiting for its own.
This page is a concept — a first sketch of what School.com becomes when it's treated like the landmark it is: the place where a parent finds the right kindergarten, a teenager compares universities honestly, and a forty-year-old starts the course that changes everything. Somewhere between those three people is the biggest education brand of the next decade. It already has a name.