WorldPages.com
WorldPages.com is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at WorldPages.com.
WorldPages.com is a company.
Key people at WorldPages.com.
Key people at WorldPages.com.
WorldPages.com, Inc. operated as a provider of print and online business directories, serving businesses and individuals with commercial information through directories published across multiple states.[1][2][4] The company merged with a subsidiary of TransWestern Publishing Company LLC, becoming TransWestern's largest acquisition to date, after which it focused on publishing 42 directories in seven states.[1][4] It is not an active investment firm or high-growth tech startup but rather a legacy directory services provider with an online presence described as an "online business directory."[2]
WorldPages.com emerged in the mid-2000s as a directory services company, with a U.S. trademark application filed on February 24, 2005 (priority date), and registered in the U.S. on February 21, 2006, under No. 3,060,282 for computer services providing commercial information directories about businesses and individuals via the internet.[3] A Canadian trademark followed, filed August 24, 2005, and registered February 23, 2010, but it was expunged on September 9, 2025, for failure to renew.[3] Key milestones include its merger with TransWestern Publishing, integrating its operations into a larger print directory portfolio.[1][4] No specific founders or early traction details are available from records, but it evolved from online directory services into a print-heavy model pre-merger.[1][2]
WorldPages.com rode the early 2000s transition from print yellow pages to online directories, capitalizing on digitizing commercial listings amid rising internet adoption for business discovery.[2][3] Its timing aligned with pre-smartphone demand for hybrid print-online solutions, before giants like Google Maps and Yelp dominated local search.[3] Market forces favoring it included fragmented regional directory needs and advertiser reliance on print, though digital disruption later pressured such models. Post-merger, it influenced legacy publishing by consolidating assets under TransWestern, bridging old-media ecosystems to basic online formats, but its trademark lapse signals declining relevance in modern search landscapes.[1][3][4]
With trademarks expunged in 2025 and roots in pre-digital directories, WorldPages.com appears dormant as an independent entity, likely fully absorbed into TransWestern's operations.[3][4] Future trends like AI-driven local search and voice assistants will further erode traditional directories, limiting its influence unless revived digitally. Its legacy underscores the shift from print to scalable online platforms—watch for any TransWestern pivots, but expect minimal evolution beyond archival role.[1][2] This merger tale highlights how even established directory players must adapt or fade in tech's relentless march forward.