Price2Click articles are built to answer buying questions, not to fill space.
Our strongest pieces start with evidence, not a blank page. We collect sources, identify what actually affects the purchase, compare alternatives, and cut anything that does not help the reader decide.
Evidence We Prefer
We give more weight to sources that are current, specific, and verifiable:
- official product pages, specifications, manuals, and support documents;
- independent reviews with measurements or clear testing notes;
- retailer listings, current prices, stock notes, and return policies;
- marketplace reviews when the pattern is repeated across many buyers;
- community threads when they reveal recurring ownership problems;
- price-history sources where available.
Weak, outdated, anonymous, or one-off claims should not drive a recommendation by themselves.
How We Try To Add Something Useful
Before a major article is published or refreshed, we look at the current search results and ask a blunt question: does our page help in a way those pages do not?
The answer should be visible on the page, usually through things like:
- a sharper decision framework;
- better price or retailer context;
- repeated user problems and fixes;
- clearer product photos or comparison visuals;
- better explanation of who should not buy;
- an original checklist, calculator, flowchart, or decision aid.
If we cannot add a useful angle, the better move is to revise, merge, or skip the page.
Evidence Levels
We treat claims differently depending on evidence strength:
- Confirmed: supported by official specs, clear measurements, or multiple strong sources.
- Likely: supported by several credible sources, but not directly measured by us.
- Reported by users: seen repeatedly in user reviews, forums, or communities.
- Editorial judgment: our interpretation of tradeoffs, clearly based on the evidence above.
Prices and Stores
Unless a guide says otherwise, prices and store references are checked against major U.S.-accessible retailers. We avoid putting internal market targeting into titles or hero copy; the price context belongs in the buying section.
Prices change. A price note is a snapshot, not a guarantee.
What We Avoid
We avoid fake testing, copied summaries, generic “best” lists, and articles that simply repackage manufacturer claims. If a topic does not have enough evidence to support useful advice, it should not become a full guide.