You already have the answers. We help the internet find them.
Machine-readable entity directory — American business economy — federation center node
AI is everywhere — and most business owners are being told they need to "do AI" without anyone actually explaining what that means for their visibility online.
Here's a prompt. Paste it into ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Grok — any AI you trust. The responses you get back are on the right. Judge for yourself.
Claude
Anthropic
ChatGPT
OpenAI
Gemini
Google
Grok
xAI
Perplexity
AI Search
Every day, people ask AI where to spend their money. ChatGPT. Google. Gemini. These systems quietly influence billions of decisions before a single phone rings. Most businesses have never touched the layer of the internet these systems actually read.
We built this because we wanted it to exist. A straight answer about what actually changed. Proof that structure works. A public resource for any business owner, developer, or agency who wants to understand how the internet actually works in the age of AI — and what to do about it.
The directory, the lexicon, the intelligence docs, the research — it's all here and it's all free. We're building the most machine-readable map of the American business economy that has ever existed. We're doing it because the web Berners-Lee imagined never fully arrived. We think it should.
When AI looks at a business in this network, it doesn't just see one page. It sees a verified identity inside a structured graph that connects businesses, industries, laws, and the people behind them. That's not something an ad campaign builds. That's infrastructure.
We work with restaurants, law firms, SEO agencies, artists, contractors, local shops — anyone with a real business and a website that deserves to be found. You belong here.
Your website is an island. Everything that makes your business worth finding — your expertise, your services, the specific thing you do better than anyone else — that's the buried treasure. You know it's there. The machines deciding whether your business gets discovered probably don't.
Search engines and AI systems are treasure hunters. They arrive, cross your island, collect what they can read, and report back to anyone searching for what you offer. Your customers. Google. ChatGPT. Every AI that gets asked about your industry.
The treasure hunters don't have all day. They've got millions of islands to visit. Their job is to find the most treasure the fastest. The islands that are clearly mapped — structured, labeled, connected to the right places — those are the ones they come back to. Your job is to make it easy for them.
They leave every island with either a green check — "Structured. I know exactly what this is. Coming back." — or a red X — "Billboard. No real treasure. Moving on."
For twenty years the internet ran on ads. Search engines wanted structured pages but nobody had to build them — paying for clicks was faster. So most of the web became billboards. Loud. Temporary. Gone the moment you stop paying.
What the most successful businesses figured out quietly is that structure and ads compound. When your foundation is machine-readable, every dollar you spend on ads works harder. You show up in the sponsored result, the organic result, and the AI citation. The customer sees you three times before they click once. That's not marketing. That's gravity.
Most businesses are only running half the play.
Let's draw the map.
You felt something shift. The news. Social media. ChatGPT everywhere, Gemini everywhere — and somehow your business still feels invisible. Something changed and nobody gave you a straight answer about what it actually means.
Here it is. The internet stopped matching keywords and started building models. Not of pages — of businesses. Of entities. What you are, where you operate, who you serve, what you're connected to. AI systems construct that model before any human ever searches for you. When someone asks ChatGPT or Google about your industry, you're either in that model or you're not. That decision was already made at the machine layer.
We live at the machine layer. We've spent years there — scraping, extracting, normalizing, classifying — doing what search engines and AI systems do, by hand, until we understood it well enough to build the infrastructure ourselves.
What we build is permanent structure at the foundation of your business identity. Not a campaign. Not a retainer that disappears when you stop paying. A foundation. Built once. Compounding forever.
Consider Wikipedia. The most cited website on the internet. First result for almost anything. Pulled into Google summaries, ChatGPT answers, Gemini responses every single day. How much do you think Wikipedia has spent on SEO retainers or ad campaigns? Not much. And it shows exactly what's possible when a website is built the right way.
Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web at CERN in 1989 and gave it to the world for free. In 2001 he published a vision for what it should become — a web where every page clearly declares what it is, who owns it, where it operates, and how it connects to everything else. A web that machines could read, reason about, and build on. Not just scan for keywords.
It mostly didn't happen. Google found a shortcut — extract meaning from unstructured pages using PageRank and algorithms — and it worked well enough that nobody had to do the harder thing. The SEO industry filled the gap with awards and retainers. For twenty-five years the web drifted toward billboards instead of substance.
Then large language models arrived. And the pages getting cited, surfaced, and recommended started looking a lot like Wikipedia. Clearly structured. Clearly about something specific. Linked to related topics. Grounded in sources. Easy for a machine to understand in one pass.
Berners-Lee's vision didn't die. It just took AI to make it matter.
Your website starts from the same place Wikipedia did. One domain. One address. The difference is never just what's on top of it — it's what's underneath.
That's what we build. — RankWithMe.ai
