
NameSilo Acquires ShortURL and Expands Its Digital Footprint
NameSilo Technologies Corp. has announced a significant step in its strategy to build out its internet infrastructure portfolio. The company confirmed that its subsidiary, NameSilo LLC, has acquired 100% of ShortURL.at, a widely used and highly ranked link shortening service. The move underscores NameSilo’s ambition to pair consumer-facing tools with its established expertise in domain registration and management.
Why ShortURL Matters
ShortURL is far from a niche utility. It has strong traffic, exceptional SEO visibility, and a loyal user base. By bringing it under the NameSilo umbrella, the company is setting up new revenue opportunities. These include branded short links and enterprise-ready link customization—services that are increasingly in demand from businesses that want control over how their links are presented and tracked.
According to CEO Kristaps Ronka, integration is already underway. A branded link platform is scheduled for release within the next two weeks. This will allow users to create custom short links on their own domains, or on domains managed by NameSilo. That kind of capability blends a consumer-friendly tool with NameSilo’s infrastructure backbone.
A Growing Product Ecosystem
NameSilo already manages more than 5.8 million domains across 160 countries. Its focus has long been on low-cost registration and management. The ShortURL acquisition moves the company deeper into digital identity services, where control over URLs is directly tied to branding, marketing, and analytics. Pairing link shortening with domain management is not just a convenience play—it’s a direct attempt to expand recurring revenue streams while strengthening the company’s position against other registrars and hosting providers.
New Leadership: Appointment of Dan Milic
Alongside the acquisition, NameSilo has added a new director to its board. Dan Milic, CFA, brings more than a decade of experience in corporate finance and investment advisory. As the founder of Inference Point, Milic has worked closely with high-growth public companies on everything from capital structure optimization to operational scaling. His background includes work across technology, healthcare, and real estate, giving him a broad perspective that will be valuable as NameSilo continues to diversify its holdings.
Milic’s academic credentials are equally strong: a Bachelor of Commerce from Ryerson University, a Master of Finance from the Rotman School of Management, and a CFA designation. He currently splits his time between Canada and Europe, which aligns well with NameSilo’s international customer base.
Equity Incentives and Management Alignment
To further align management with shareholder interests, the company granted more than 1 million stock options and 750,000 restricted share units (RSUs). The options, priced at $1.40 per share, are valid for five years, while the RSUs vest after one year. Once vested, each RSU converts into a common share of the company. Incentive structures like this are common in growth-focused firms, but the scale here shows the company’s confidence in both its people and its direction.
What This Means for the Market
The acquisition of ShortURL is more than a one-off purchase. It signals how registrars are looking beyond simple domain sales. Competitors have been building out hosting, email, and security bundles. NameSilo is choosing a different lane: it is bolting on consumer-friendly tools that have real traction, then pairing them with enterprise-grade infrastructure. It’s an approach that could pay dividends as businesses demand more control over their digital presence.
From my perspective as someone who has worked in SEO, domains, and digital identity for decades, this deal stands out for a simple reason: link shortening has always been underutilized by registrars. Most registrars have gone after hosting or email, but short links sit at the center of marketing and analytics. A branded short URL can boost click-through rates, reinforce brand recognition, and improve trust in links. That makes it valuable not just for enterprise marketing teams but also for small businesses looking for credibility.
This also matters for search professionals. Short links that resolve cleanly on branded domains avoid the risk of being flagged as spammy redirects by platforms or browsers. With NameSilo’s infrastructure behind ShortURL, I expect better reliability and uptime than many of the smaller services in this space. For companies serious about SEO, control of every link that touches their brand is non-negotiable. NameSilo clearly understands that.
NameSilo’s recent announcements reveal a company thinking several moves ahead. Acquiring ShortURL adds a recognizable brand and a practical tool to its lineup. Adding Dan Milic to the board strengthens governance and finance expertise. Issuing stock options and RSUs shows confidence in its leadership team. Taken together, these steps point to a registrar that is no longer content with just selling domains—it is building a broader digital identity platform. In a competitive space, that kind of long-term planning can make the difference between a registrar that fades into the background and one that becomes a market leader.
