WikiFounders exists because founders who have built real things deserve a real, permanent record of what they've achieved — one that Google, AI platforms, investors, and the world can find and trust.
Founders build companies, create jobs, drive industries forward, and leave lasting marks on the world. Yet when someone searches their name, the results often tell a fraction of the story. A LinkedIn profile. A company about page. Occasionally, a press mention or two.
Wikipedia is the one platform that changes everything. It's the single result Google consistently elevates to the top of the page. It's the source every AI tool cites when asked about a person. It's third-party, permanent, and trusted in a way that owned media can never replicate.
Our mission is simple: ensure that every founder who has earned their reputation has a Wikipedia page that reflects it — and that the page remains accurate, protected, and optimized indefinitely.
Every investor who researches you. Every journalist who covers you. Every client who compares you. Every AI tool that answers a question about your industry. They all rely on the same source — Wikipedia. This isn't optional positioning. It's foundational authority.
Most accomplished founders have a credibility problem they don't realize they have — until someone important searches their name.
When an investor, journalist, or potential partner searches your name tonight — what's the first page result? For most founders, even highly successful ones, it's surprisingly weak. LinkedIn. A company page. And then nothing that signals recognized authority.
When someone asks ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google's AI about influential founders in your industry, the names that surface are the ones with Wikipedia pages. Founders without a page are simply not part of that conversation — regardless of what they've actually built.
A Wikipedia page signals something that no amount of social media presence or owned media can replicate: independent, third-party verification of who you are and what you've achieved. It's the difference between telling the world you matter and the world being told by a neutral, trusted source.
We never promise what we can't deliver. If a founder doesn't qualify for a Wikipedia page, we tell them honestly — and help them build the notability needed to qualify. Our credibility depends on yours.
We never circumvent Wikipedia's guidelines, policies, or editorial process. Every page we create is designed to be editorially sound, neutrally written, and properly sourced — because a page that violates policy is a liability, not an asset.
Our clients have high standards because they've achieved significant things. We match those standards in how we communicate, how we deliver, and how we maintain your presence. Excellence is the baseline, not the goal.
A Wikipedia page is not a one-time transaction. It's a living document that evolves as your career evolves. Our monthly maintenance model means we're invested in your long-term authority, not just the initial publication.
We built WikiFounders specifically for a very particular type of person — one who has done the work, earned the reputation, and now deserves a permanent record of it.
You invested $20,000–$30,000+ to tell your story. That investment deserves a permanent authority anchor that surfaces every time someone searches your name.
CEOs, managing directors, and executives of significant companies who have built a meaningful legacy that deserves independent documentation.
Thought leaders, published authors, keynote speakers, and media personalities who need a credible third-party foundation for their entire personal brand.
When LPs, co-investors, and portfolio founders research you, your Wikipedia page should be the first credibility signal that builds immediate confidence.
Founders building global reputations who need Wikipedia presence in multiple languages to establish authority across different markets and regions.
Leaders who understand that reputation management is proactive, not reactive — and want a professionally maintained Wikipedia page as a cornerstone of their digital identity.
WikiFounders builds the permanent authority asset. FounderMentions monitors how that authority lives and grows in the world.
The foundation. We research, write, and publish your Wikipedia page — then protect and maintain it every month. This is the permanent authority asset that anchors your entire digital identity.
Think of it as the world's most trusted third-party record of everything you've built.
The radar. Once your Wikipedia page is live, it begins generating press citations, media references, and AI mentions. FounderMentions tracks every one of them in real time.
One dashboard for your name mentions, company citations, competitor tracking, and authority score — delivered weekly.
A free 20-minute Notability Audit. No pitch. No pressure. Just an honest review of what's already in place and what's possible — from a team that genuinely understands what you've built.