Self-serve hub
Use our free and self-serve tools to check sources, monitor pages, evaluate media and prepare your brand for Wikipedia, Wikidata and AI search.
Self-serve first
Is my coverage strong enough. Which language edition is worth the effort. Will my image survive Commons review. Who edited my page overnight. The tools below answer these without a call, a contract or an email address.
The honest split: research and monitoring are self-serve — that is what this page is for. Publication and defence are where policy mistakes get expensive, and where our managed services take over. If you are still at “does my company even qualify,” start with Can my company get a Wikipedia page — then come back and run the checks.
The toolbox
Three are free and run in your browser. The paid ones have fixed prices and fixed scope. One is an external partner product — labeled as such.
Free
Compare the SEO authority of 40+ Wikipedia language editions side by side — see where a page would carry the most weight before you invest in one.
Free
Test whether your image would survive Wikimedia Commons review — license, provenance and quality flags surfaced before you upload anything.
Free
55+ outlets with Wikipedia-eligibility notes, filterable by what counts — so your next PR placement builds toward notability instead of past it.
From €79/yr
Real-time edit alerts on any Wikipedia page. Know within minutes when someone changes the article you care about — not weeks later.
€490 · credited
An evidence-based go/no-go verdict on your Wikipedia case, source by source. The fee is credited toward the project if you proceed.
€490
What ChatGPT, Perplexity and Google AI Overviews say about you today — a measured baseline plus a 90-day plan to improve it.
Self-checkout
Wikidata entities at €550, Wikipedia backlinks from €130, Grokipedia articles at €700, Wikitia at €460 and more — fixed scope, self-checkout.
External partner
A partner-built self-serve Wikipedia SEO toolkit. Separate product, separate checkout — linked here because self-serve users asked for it.
Prices are in EUR; the site-wide toggle shows an approximate USD. WikiSEO.ai opens in a new tab and is billed by its own team, not by us.
Self-serve vs managed
Most research tasks are self-serve. Publication and defence are where mistakes get expensive. The honest split, situation by situation.
| Situation | Self-serve is enough | You want managed execution |
|---|---|---|
| Time and attention | You have the hours to read policy, iterate and wait out review queues. | A funding round, launch or IPO window makes weeks of trial and error expensive. |
| Risk profile | Exploratory: checking sources, comparing language editions, watching a page. | Deletion risk: a prior deletion, a contested topic, or an article strangers keep editing. |
| Conflict of interest | Research only — you read, compare and monitor, but do not edit. | COI-sensitive publication: paid-contribution disclosure, neutral drafting and talk-page process done properly. |
| Scope | One entity, one language, one page to understand. | Multi-edition programs — Wikipedia plus Wikidata plus Commons, in several markets at once. |
| Next step | Keep using the tools above | See managed servicesEnterprise programs |
The qualification ladder
Free tools tell you whether there is a case. The audits turn a hunch into an evidence-based verdict. Managed projects start with the homework already done — and already paid for.
Step 1
Run the DR checker, the image checker and the media list. Watch an existing page with WikiMonitoring. The checkers cost nothing — and you learn whether there is a case worth funding at all.
Step 2
The Wikipedia notability audit (€490) and the AI visibility audit (€490) replace hope with an evidence-based verdict and a plan. Proceed to a project and the fee is credited — the audit becomes a down payment, not a cost.
Step 3
Where the verdict is go, the project starts with sources already mapped and risks already named — drafting, publication, defence and monitoring handled by the team.
Where the audit says no-go, we say so — and you keep the report. The terms behind managed work — success rates, refund conditions, monitoring windows — are written out in our guarantees.
Frequently asked questions
Run the checks today. If they surface harder questions — deletion risk, conflict-of-interest exposure, a deadline — bring the results to us and skip the discovery call.