Case Studies
Getting a Wikipedia article published requires more than good writing. It requires an understanding of notability standards, editorial policy, source credibility, and the expectations of Wikipedia's volunteer reviewer community. Every project we take on is different; the subject, the challenge, the available sources, and the path to publication all vary.
The case studies below show how we approach that complexity. Each one documents a real project: the challenge the client faced, the strategy we built around it, and the outcome we delivered. Names and details are presented as they appear on Wikipedia, where the articles are publicly accessible.
Elevating Global Academic Visibility for a Leading Pediatric Endocrinologist
Ethel Codner is a leading pediatric endocrinologist whose accomplished career in diabetes research, adolescent reproductive health, and international clinical guidelines lacked a centralized public presence. Her work was fragmented across journals and institutional profiles, limiting her discoverability. The team conducted a notability audit, curated independent sources, and developed a structured Wikipedia article that consolidated her career into a single authoritative profile, significantly improving her search visibility and credibility.
Building Visibility for Underrepresented Voices in Academia
Oscar A. Barbarin is a clinical psychologist whose research on child development, racial disparities, and African American families has shaped critical conversations around equity and social justice. Despite his significant contributions, his public visibility did not reflect his impact. The team created a structured, policy-compliant Wikipedia article that brought his work into the global knowledge ecosystem, ensuring an underrepresented academic voice was no longer confined to academic circles alone.
Turning Complex Medical Research into Recognizable Authority
Dorian Haskard is an emeritus professor at Imperial College London whose work in cardiovascular immunology and vascular inflammation was buried in dense scientific literature, invisible to anyone outside the field. The team translated his complex research into a clear, structured Wikipedia article that made decades of foundational medical contributions readable, credible, and publicly discoverable.
Preserving a Lifetime of Academic Contribution in a Single Authoritative Narrative
Thomas J. Sienkewicz is a classical studies professor with four decades of teaching and scholarship. Despite his significant influence, his contributions were scattered with no cohesive public record. We brought everything together into a single, structured Wikipedia article that made his lifetime of work accessible and complete.

