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Can an ORM firm guarantee that edits to our Wikipedia page will stick?

Quick answer

No. The community of independent editors decides what stays. We maximize the odds with well-sourced, neutral, policy-compliant submissions, but no firm can guarantee specific editorial outcomes.

No firm should be selling Wikipedia outcome guarantees and we do not. Wikipedia articles are written and revised by an independent community of volunteer editors who apply their own judgment to every change. What we can do, and what we are good at, is to maximize the probability that a proposed change will be accepted. We do this by submitting policy-compliant content (no promotional tone, no undue weight, no sourcing that fails the reliable-source bar), by working through the disclosed COI process so the proposal is evaluated on its merits rather than dismissed for procedural reasons, by selecting and presenting sources the community is likely to accept, and by engaging respectfully with editors who push back. The result, across years of work for major brands and executives, is a high acceptance rate on the changes we propose. But we describe it as advisory and strategic work, not as guaranteed editorial outcomes, because anything else would be inaccurate.

Last reviewed: 19/05/2026

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