A Wikipedia page is a trust signal at the highest level. But it is also one of the most technically demanding editorial projects you can commission. This guide walks you through everything you need to know before starting.

What a Wikipedia page is — and is not

First of all, a Wikipedia page is an encyclopedic entry maintained by a volunteer community with strict editorial standards. However, it is not a marketing channel, a business card, or a paid profile. Therefore, the community's primary question about any new page is: does this subject deserve an encyclopedic entry according to Wikipedia's notability criteria?

The notability threshold

In practice, Wikipedia applies notability standards per category. For example, for companies (WP:CORP), for academics (WP:NACADEMIC), for authors (WP:NAUTHOR), and for organizations. In every case, however, the core question is the same: have independent, reliable sources discussed the subject substantively?

Specifically, "independent" means: not your own communication, not commissioned communication, and not advertorial. Furthermore, "reliable" means: editorial oversight and verifiable reputation. Finally, "substantive" means: discussed, not merely mentioned.

Not sure whether your case qualifies?

Request a confidential assessment — within 24 hours an honest judgment on whether your subject meets Wikipedia's notability standards.

Request a confidential assessment

What counts as a source

Reputable newspapers and magazines with editorial oversight. Academic publications. Documentaries. Books by recognized publishers. What does not count: your own website, press releases, LinkedIn posts, directory listings, paid mentions.

Want to know if your case qualifies?

Independent editors assess within 24 hours whether your subject meets Wikipedia criteria. Free, confidential, no obligations.

Request a confidential assessment

The editorial process

In practice, a Wikipedia page is written in encyclopedic tone. It should be neutral, factual and sourced. Moreover, every claim should be backed by a citation — so no marketing language, no embellishment, no emotional appeals. Otherwise, the community detects and removes such language within hours.

Transparency

Furthermore, Wikimedia terms of use require transparency about commercial engagements. Hidden contributions are detected by the community and consequently undermine both the article and the subject's reputation.

Cost

Naturally, cost varies by effort required. For example, a straightforward case with clear sources costs less than a complex case requiring source research and community negotiation. Therefore, we do not communicate prices before an assessment because that would create wrong expectations.

Timeline

Typically, from first contact to placement takes 4–8 weeks: first one week for the confidential assessment, then 1–2 weeks for source research, next 2–4 weeks for editorial drafting and review, and finally one week for placement. Afterwards, community review can take days to months depending on visibility.

Prefer to have a specialist do it?

Independent editors at Wikipediapaginamaken write and place your page — no placement guarantee, with an honest qualification up front.

See our approach

Risks

However, the main risk is that the community rejects your page. This happens when notability is insufficient, sources are weak, or tone drifts toward promotional. Therefore, in our process the confidential assessment minimizes this risk — because we decline cases that will not survive.

What to do next

So, if you are considering a Wikipedia page, request a confidential assessment. Then within 24 hours you will know whether your case qualifies and what the next steps would look like. In short: no commitment, no sales pressure.

Frequently asked questions

What is a Wikipedia page and what is it not?
A Wikipedia page is an encyclopedic entry maintained by a volunteer community with strict editorial standards. It is not a marketing channel, a business card or a paid profile. The community's primary question about any new page is whether the subject deserves an encyclopedic entry according to Wikipedia's notability criteria. That framing matters because attempts to use Wikipedia as a promotional tool are detected and reverted quickly, and they can damage the subject's longer-term reputation.
How does Wikipedia define notability?
Wikipedia applies notability standards per category: WP:CORP for companies, WP:NACADEMIC for academics, WP:NAUTHOR for authors, and dedicated criteria for organizations. The core question is always the same: have independent, reliable sources discussed the subject substantively? Independent means not own or commissioned communication. Reliable means editorial oversight and a verifiable reputation. Substantive means actually discussed, not merely mentioned. Three or more sources passing all three tests is usually the minimum.
What does the editorial process involve?
The process typically takes four to eight weeks from first contact to placement: a confidential assessment in week one, source research across one to two weeks, editorial drafting and review over two to four weeks, then placement in the final week. After placement, community review can take days to months depending on visibility. The page is written in encyclopedic tone, neutral, factual and sourced, with every claim backed by a citation. No marketing language, no embellishment, no emotional appeals.
What are the main risks of having a page created?
The main risk is community rejection. This happens when notability is insufficient, sources are weak, or tone drifts toward promotional. Wikimedia terms of use require transparency about commercial engagements. Hidden contributions are detected by the community and undermine both the article and the subject's reputation. A confidential assessment up front is what minimizes these risks by declining cases that will not survive community review.