Recommendation standards
A product earns a recommendation when it has a clear use case, credible specs, practical advantages, and tradeoffs that make sense for the buyer described on the page.
Evidence labels
Source-backed analysis and hands-on testing are not the same thing. Manufacturer specifications, product documentation, availability checks, and side-by-side comparisons can support a recommendation, but a page should not imply field testing unless original use notes, photos, video, measurements, or test logs support it.
What gets updated
- Product availability and fit when the market changes.
- Specs, pricing notes, and feature descriptions when needed.
- Evidence basis when new hands-on notes, photos, or measurements are added.
- Recommendations when a better option takes over a category.
- Internal links as new reviews and guides are published.
Affiliate links
Affiliate links help support the site. The affiliate relationship is disclosed on pages with shopping links and explained on the affiliate disclosure page.
Corrections
If a product detail, recommendation, or link looks wrong, use the contact page. The goal is to fix useful corrections quickly and keep buyer-facing pages accurate.