How we operate within Wikipedia's editorial policies — and why compliance is not optional for us.
WikiFounders exists to help qualified founders establish a legitimate, lasting Wikipedia presence. Every decision we make — from who we accept as clients to how we write and submit articles — is guided by one principle: full compliance with Wikipedia's published policies. We do not take shortcuts. We do not engage in undisclosed paid editing. We do not submit content that does not meet Wikipedia's standards. That is the only way to build a Wikipedia presence that survives.
Wikipedia is not a publishing platform you can game. It is operated by a global community of volunteer editors who are deeply skilled at identifying and removing content that does not meet their standards — including content placed by paid editors who have not followed the rules. Articles that violate Wikipedia's policies are deleted. Editors who violate disclosure requirements are banned. Clients who receive non-compliant articles lose them.
The only Wikipedia page worth having is one that is written compliantly, sourced correctly, and maintained actively. WikiFounders was built around this understanding from the beginning.
Wikipedia requires that every article subject be "notable" — meaning the subject must have received significant coverage in reliable sources that are independent of the subject. For founders and business figures, this typically means substantial press coverage, citations in major publications, podcast features, documentary appearances, or industry recognition.
Our Notability Audit is specifically designed to assess whether a potential client meets this standard before we accept any engagement. We will not accept a client who does not qualify. A Wikipedia article without genuine notability will be nominated for deletion and removed — and that is a far worse outcome than not having a page at all.
Every claim in a Wikipedia article must be attributable to a reliable, published source. We do not include unverifiable information, puffery, or promotional language — even if it is factually true but unverifiable through published sources. Every sentence we write is sourced.
Wikipedia articles must be written from a neutral point of view, presenting facts without promotional framing. This is often the biggest adjustment for clients who are accustomed to marketing language. Our articles read like encyclopedia entries, not press releases — because that is the only kind of content Wikipedia allows to remain.
We do not introduce new interpretations, analysis, or claims that cannot be supported by existing published sources. Wikipedia documents what has already been established in the public record — it does not create that record.
This is where many paid Wikipedia services fail — and where we hold ourselves to the highest standard. Wikipedia requires that anyone paid to edit on behalf of a subject must disclose that relationship. We comply fully with this requirement. Our editing accounts are properly disclosed as paid contributors. We do not attempt to conceal our role or circumvent this policy. Undisclosed paid editing violates Wikipedia's Terms of Use and results in account bans and article deletion.
WikiFounders discloses its paid editing relationship on all submitted articles in accordance with Wikipedia's Paid Contribution Disclosure policy. This transparency is a feature, not a limitation — disclosed articles that meet Wikipedia's standards are significantly more durable than undisclosed ones that may be discovered and deleted at any time.
We conduct a full Notability Audit before accepting every client. If you do not meet the standard, we tell you — and help you build the credentials to qualify before we begin.
Every article we write follows Wikipedia's Manual of Style. No marketing language. No unverifiable claims. No promotional framing. Articles that read like press releases are deleted.
Citations must come from independent, reliable publications — not the client's own website, press releases, or affiliated media. We source only what Wikipedia's community considers acceptable.
We disclose our paid editing role on every article we submit or edit. This is Wikipedia policy, and it is the ethical standard we hold ourselves to regardless of whether it could go undetected.
When editor discussions arise on article Talk pages, we participate openly as disclosed paid contributors — not anonymously. We welcome editorial scrutiny because our work meets the standard.
We do not create fake sources, coordinate off-wiki with sock puppet accounts, place promotional content disguised as citations, or use any technique designed to deceive Wikipedia's community. Full stop.
Compliance means your Wikipedia page is built on a foundation that can withstand editorial scrutiny. It means your page will not be nominated for deletion six months after it goes live because an editor discovered it was written by an undisclosed paid editor. It means your page is genuinely notable — not artificially inflated — which means it survives long-term.
Compliance also means we will sometimes say no. If you are not yet notable enough for Wikipedia, we will tell you. If the sources we find are not strong enough to support an article, we will tell you rather than submit something likely to be rejected. This honesty is a feature of working with WikiFounders, not a limitation.
If you have specific questions about how we operate, what we disclose, or how we approach a particular aspect of Wikipedia's policies, we welcome the conversation. Transparency is not a constraint for us — it is how we operate.
Contact us at info@wikifounders.com or book a free Notability Audit to discuss your specific situation.
The only Wikipedia presence worth having is one built to last. Start with a free 20-minute Notability Audit and find out exactly where you stand.