User talk:Defeyter

March 2024
Hello. Your recent edit appears to have added the name of a non-notable entity to a list that normally includes only notable entries. In general, a person, organization or product added to a list should have a pre-existing article before being added to most lists. If you wish to create such an article, please first confirm that the subject qualifies for a separate, stand-alone article according to Wikipedia's notability guideline. Thank you. MrOllie (talk) 18:22, 8 March 2024 (UTC)


 * Hey MrOllie, I appreciate the reply.
 * I'm somewhat stuck as I've worked for Brightspot for the past 15 years and don't want to violate the policy of creating a page for Brightspot while being an employee. Yet our competitors are all listed and our customers include Walmart, Amazon, Google, Coca-Cola, Politico, LA Times, Healthgrades, etc. All while we do more then 60M a year in revenue. We are legitimately in this space and larger then some of the existing listed CMS companies.
 * Paying someone to create a page also seems against the spirit of Wikipedia ( I actually haven't looked that up but I'm assuming so) And it's unlikely a customer of ours is going to take the time to create a page for us. At least it hasn't happened in the past 15 years.
 * Would you object if I stubbed out a very vanilla Brightspot page that simply lists our creation date, rounds of funding, headquarters location, CMS product versions and release dates? Making it as non-advertisement as possible?  This is us https://www.brightspot.com/ Defeyter (talk) 01:01, 13 March 2024 (UTC)
 * You should have a look at WP:PAID - even adding your company to a list is a violation. And you should not create an article about your company, no. After you have made the disclosures required by Wikipedia's terms of use you can use the WP:AFC process to create an article, and you can request edits about your employer on the talk pages associated with the articles. MrOllie (talk) 01:05, 13 March 2024 (UTC)