Wikipedia

Get a Wikipedia page that actually survives.

Most DIY Wikipedia pages get deleted within days. We write properly sourced, editorially compliant articles that pass review — for individuals, companies, and public figures. English and foreign-language editions.

Why a Wikipedia page matters more than it used to.

A Wikipedia page used to be about prestige. Now it's one of the primary identity databases of the internet — and it directly affects how you show up in search and AI.

Knowledge Panels

Google pulls directly from Wikipedia to populate Knowledge Panels. A Wikipedia page is often the fastest path to getting one.

AI answers

ChatGPT, Copilot, and Google AI Overviews all reference Wikipedia when building summaries about people and companies.

Journalist research

Reporters and editors check Wikipedia when researching people and companies. It shapes how they write about you.

Investor due diligence

Investors and partners Google you before meetings. A Wikipedia page gives them verified, structured information instantly.

Search rankings

Wikipedia pages rank highly for name searches. It's often the first or second result when someone looks you up.

Entity validation

Search engines use Wikipedia to confirm that a person or company is a real, notable entity — not just a website.

Why most Wikipedia pages get deleted.

People try to create their own pages all the time. Almost all of them fail. Wikipedia isn't a profile platform — it's an encyclopedia with strict rules.

Written like marketing copy instead of an encyclopedia entry
Sources aren't independent — press releases, your own website, etc.
Created by someone with an obvious conflict of interest
Subject doesn't meet Wikipedia's notability requirements yet

When these issues show up, the page gets flagged, rejected during review, or deleted shortly after publication. Our job is to make sure none of that happens.

The first question: do you qualify?

Before anything else, the subject needs to meet Wikipedia's notability guidelines. That means there must already be significant, independent coverage of you or your organisation. Things like:

Major news articles
Magazine profiles or features
Published interviews in recognised outlets
Academic references or citations
Books from reputable publishers
Industry awards or recognition

Without these sources, a page won't survive review. That's why the first step in our process is always a notability evaluation — we'll tell you honestly whether you qualify before any work begins.

How we build your Wikipedia page.

No shortcuts. We follow Wikipedia's editorial framework and create properly sourced encyclopedia articles that pass review.

01

Notability evaluation

We assess whether you or your organisation meets Wikipedia's notability standards. If you don't qualify yet, we'll tell you — and we can help build the coverage needed to get there.

02

Source research

We find and verify independent sources that can support every claim in the article. Press releases and your own website don't count — we need real, third-party coverage.

03

Article development

We write the article in Wikipedia's encyclopedic style — neutral tone, proper structure, inline citations. It reads like an encyclopedia entry, not a marketing page.

04

Formatting and submission

The article is formatted to Wikipedia's technical standards and submitted through the Articles for Creation review process.

05

Review and revision

If Wikipedia editors request changes, we handle the revisions until the article is accepted and published.

Who this is for.

We also offer foreign-language Wikipedia pages for clients who may not yet meet English Wikipedia's notability bar.

Founders & EntrepreneursAuthors & AcademicsPublic FiguresExecutives & ConsultantsTech Companies & StartupsEstablished Businesses

What's included.

  • Notability assessment before any work begins
  • Independent source research and verification
  • Professional Wikipedia article writing in encyclopedic style
  • Structured citation development with inline references
  • Submission through Articles for Creation review
  • Editorial revision support until acceptance
  • Available in English and foreign-language editions

An honest note about guarantees.

No agency can guarantee a Wikipedia page will be accepted. All new pages are reviewed by independent Wikipedia editors who we have no control over. Anyone who tells you otherwise is lying.

What we can guarantee is that the article will meet notability standards, contain reliable citations, follow Wikipedia formatting, and maintain a neutral tone. Those are the factors that determine whether a page survives — and we get them right.

Common questions

How long does it take?

Most projects take 3-8 weeks depending on the complexity of the research and how quickly the review process moves.

Can I write my own page?

Technically yes, but Wikipedia discourages it due to conflict-of-interest guidelines. Pages created by the subject themselves are much more likely to be flagged and deleted.

What if I don't qualify yet?

We'll tell you upfront. We can also help build the media coverage needed to meet notability requirements through our press release and digital PR services.

Can a Wikipedia page be deleted after it's published?

Yes — if it lacks reliable sources or appears promotional, it can be nominated for deletion. That's why we focus on getting the sourcing and tone right from the start.

Do you offer foreign-language Wikipedia pages?

Yes. Foreign-language editions often have different notability thresholds. This is a good option for clients who don't yet qualify for the English Wikipedia.

What happens after the page is live?

It becomes part of the encyclopedia and can be edited by other contributors. We can provide ongoing monitoring if needed.

Think you qualify for a Wikipedia page?

Send us your name or company and we'll do a free notability check. If you qualify, we'll walk you through the process and timeline.