Why a Wikipedia page is not something you write yourself
Wikipedia is an editorial community with thousands of active volunteers who check every new page for notability, tone and source quality. A page that reads like marketing is removed within hours. A page without independent sources is deleted within days. Most self-written pages do not survive the first week.
What we do
We are independent Wikipedia editors. We assess whether your subject qualifies, research your sources, write the page in encyclopedic tone, place it on Wikipedia and declare the paid collaboration transparently according to Wikimedia terms of use.
The editorial standard
Our pages survive because we apply the same standard the community applies: verifiability, neutrality, notability. No embellishment, no hidden contributions, no promises we cannot keep.
The four phases
1. Confidential assessment (24 hours)
You send us your case. We evaluate your notability against Wikipedia criteria and qualify your sources. You receive an honest judgment — also if that judgment is "not yet".
2. Source research (1–2 weeks)
We map all independent publications, media references and citations. Only when the source base is solid do we continue.
3. Editorial drafting (2–4 weeks)
An independent editor writes the page in encyclopedic tone, fully sourced, NPOV-compliant. You review before placement.
4. Placement and aftercare (within 1 week)
We place the page on Wikipedia with transparent disclosure of the paid collaboration. One year of maintenance included: we follow edits, answer community questions and keep your page accurate.
What you get
A Wikipedia page that survives the community review, written by an independent editor, delivered with full source attribution and one year of maintenance.
What we do not do
We do not promise placement — Wikipedia is a community, not a vendor. We do not hide collaborations — that violates Wikimedia policy. We do not write marketing — the community removes it.