Simple Ways to Write a Wikipedia Article
Simple Ways to Write a Wikipedia Article
This wikiHow will teach you how to write and publish an article on Wikipedia. Anyone can create a Wikipedia page, but it's important to follow their writing guidelines and choose topics that fit their standards. Your topic should be "notable" (a subject covered elsewhere in reasonable detail), and your article should be verifiable with authoritative sources. Once you've decided what you want to write, we've got you covered! The steps below will walk you through the whole process.
Things You Should Know
  • Before creating a new article, check to see if an article about that topic already exists.
  • If you don't want to commit to writing an entire article, you can submit an article proposal as a draft.
  • To write a new article from scratch, you'll need to create and confirm a Wikipedia account.

Proposing a Draft

Launch the Wikipedia Article Wizard. To create, write, and submit a proposed article as a non-autoconfirmed user, go to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Articles_for_creation. Then, click on Click here to start a new article to launch Wikipedia's Article Wizard. The Articles for Creation page contains useful information about submitting proposed articles as a non-autoconfirmed user, including things you should keep in mind when choosing a topic and how your article will be reviewed. While not required, it can be helpful to read over this information before clicking through to the Article Wizard.

Read through Wikipedia’s Article Wizard to get to the article draft page. First, click through to the Article Wizard from the Article for Creation page, or go directly to the Article Wizard at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Article_wizard. Then, read and click through each of the first three pages in the Wizard to get to the Create article draft page. The first page of the Article Wizard asks you if you want to go to the next page or use the Wikipedia Sandbox to practice editing and writing articles. Click Next to go to the next page. The second page in the Article Wizard briefly covers Wikipedia’s copyright, notability, and referencing guidelines. Click Next to go to the next page. The third page of the Article Wizard details a few of the most common mistakes that Wikipedia contributors make. You can then click I’m not connected to the subject Draft Creation page. Or, click I’m writing about something close to me or I’m paid to edit to create a discloser at the top of your article that explains your relationship with the article.

Enter the name of your article draft and click Create new article draft. On the last page of the Article Wizard, you’ll be asked to enter the name of your article draft. This will direct you to the article draft creation page.

Write the content of your proposed article in the text box. Wikipedia provides some directions for writing your article inside the text box provided, which can then later be edited or deleted. For more in-depth information on how to format your Wikipedia article, visit https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Cheatsheet. If you need help writing your article, you can live chat with a Wikipedia help channel representative at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:IRC_help_disclaimer.

Click Publish page to submit your article for review. As a non-autoconfirmed user, your article won’t be published on the live site or appear on any search results. Instead, your article will be saved in a public drafting area until a Wikipedia editor reviews it. Reviews generally take 5 months or longer. As long as your article remains in the drafting area, you can edit it as needed. Draft articles that aren’t published or further edited for six months will usually be deleted from the drafting area. If your article is declined, you can still edit it. Once you feel like you’ve edited it enough and that it’s ready for resubmission, you can request a re-review by adding {{subst:submit}} at the beginning of your draft.

Writing an Article

Register an account with Wikipedia. First, go to https://www.wikipedia.org and click Create an Account at the top-right corner. Then, choose and enter your username and password. You can also provide your email address if you want to receive updates from Wikipedia, but this is optional.

Make at least 10 Wikipedia article edits. There are two ways you can start making edits to existing Wikipedia articles. First, after submitting your registration information, Wikipedia will automatically send you to a new webpage with a pop-up window asking if you want to edit a suggested article. You can then click on the Edit a suggested article button to make ten edits to suggested articles. You can also choose which articles you want to edit by clicking the Edit button at the top of the article’s page. If you make an edit that is later deleted, this will still count towards your total number of edits.

Get autoconfirmed status after four days. Once your Wikipedia account has been active for four days and you’ve done at least ten edits on existing articles, you will automatically be granted autoconfirmed status. This will allow you to create articles, as well as move pages, edit semi-protected pages, and upload files.

Click your username to create your user page. To have a personal Wikipedia user page where you can create and write articles, click on your username at the top of any Wikipedia page. This will direct you to a page with a link for Start the user [username] page. Click this link, which will direct you to your unpublished user page. You can then click on the Publish page button at the bottom of the page to create your user page. When you’re directed to your unpublished user page, you’ll see an empty text box above the Publish page button. This space allows you to write something about your Wikipedia user page. Writing in this box will not create an article.

Create your first article. Once you’ve published your user page, made 10 article edits, and have had your account for at least four days, you can start writing new articles for Wikipedia. To get started, search Wikipedia for the topic you'd like to write about. If an article about that topic does not exist, you'll see a message saying, "The page does not exist. You can ask for it to be created, but consider checking the search results below to see whether the topic is already covered." If you decide a new page should be created, click the red link containing your search terms to proceed to the article creation page. Before writing your first article, read through Wikipedia’s article creation and writing guidelines to help ensure that your article gets published. To read through Wikipedia’s article guidelines, visit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Your_first_article. See this method for tips on choosing your first article topic.

Type your article into the blank. As long as your account has been autoconfirmed, you'll be brought to a blank article page on which you can compose your new article. If your account has yet to be confirmed, click Start creating to launch the Article Wizard, and see this method for more information. Writing a Wikipedia article isn't as simple as typing plain text into a box. Familiarize yourself with Wikipedia's Manual of Style and Markup syntax to ensure your article is formatted correctly before submitting.

Click Show Preview to check your work. Before submitting your article, make sure it looks exactly how you want it to look by clicking this button at the bottom. If you need to change anything, you'll be able to do so in the editor below the preview.

Click Save Page when you're ready to publish. Because your account is autoconfirmed, your new article will be published on the live site immediately. If your article does not contain proper formatting or violates any of Wikipedia's rules, it may be deleted immediately. Don't save the page until you are sure the finished work is suitable for publishing.

Choosing a Topic

Do a search to see if the article you want to write already exists. Before writing an article, either as an autoconfirmed user or not, it’s helpful to enter your topic idea into the Wikipedia search bar to see if it already exists. Wikipedia currently has almost 6 million articles, so there’s always a good chance that the topic you want to write an article on is already covered.

Assess whether your topic is notable enough for a Wikipedia article. To assess if the topic for the article you want to write is notable and verifiable enough to meet Wikipedia’s article standards, read over the notability guidelines at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Notability. In general, if a topic has significant coverage in reliable sources, it may be considered notable enough for its own Wikipedia article. There are, however, several general and subject-specific notability regulations for Wikipedia articles, many of which are determined by experienced editors after your article is submitted. If you can find several reliable, independent sources that cover your topic, it will likely be considered notable enough for a Wikipedia article.

Make sure that your article doesn’t violate copyright law or plagiarize. In the United States (where Wikipedia is headquartered), copyright law protects the work of authors, artists, and other creators from being used or reproduced without rights. As part of its policy, Wikipedia will reject any article submissions from both autoconfirmed and non-autoconfirmed users that violate copyright law or plagiarizes a portion of any outside source.

Avoid advertising or using personal information in your article. Wikipedia is intended to be an encyclopedia, not a personal webpage or business advertisement. Therefore, if you write an article that contains any personal and promotional information, or any information that does not directly pertain to the topic at hand, your article will likely be rejected or deleted. Writing an article about yourself or your company is strongly discouraged, as this is considered a conflict of interest.

Write a requested article if you don’t have your own topic. If you want to write a Wikipedia article but aren’t sure what to write about, you can try tackling one of Wikipedia’s thousands of requested article topics. To see if writing any of the existing requested articles appeals to you, visit https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Requested_articles and click on the subject to see the requested articles for that subject.

Using Wikipedia Standards

Follow Wikipedia’s structure to organize the contents of your article. While there are no hard and fast rules, most successful Wikipedia articles contain an introduction followed by paragraphs organized with headings and subheadings. In addition, strong articles contain relevant images that are placed near the corresponding information in the article. In addition, try to keep your article to 50,000 characters of text or less. Articles that exceed this length generally need to be split into smaller articles to keep them easily readable. Using headings to organize your article is particularly important because your headings are then shown in the table of contents that appears at the beginning to help readers navigate your article.

Stick to Wikipedia’s typical styles when you decide what to include. In most cases, successful Wikipedia articles use both a summary article style and an inverted pyramid style at the same time. A summary-style article arranges a broad topic into a main article and side articles. An inverted pyramid style article is an article that prioritizes the most important information at the top, which is then followed by supporting information and additional details. The key feature of both summary-style and pyramid style articles used in most Wikipedia articles is a lead section at the beginning that summarizes the article and provides an overview of the most important information.

Keep the tone of your article formal and impersonal. One of the reasons for Wikipedia’s popularity is that its articles aim to inform, not convince. Therefore, the tone of your article must always remain as impersonal and dispassionate as possible. To help keep your tone formal, avoid using slang, colloquialisms, doublespeak, or jargon in your article.

Use wikitext to create the formatting elements in your article. Unlike standard articles written in a word processor, you’ll need to use text codes called wiki tags to create headings, subheadings, and bold and italicized words. In addition, using wiki tags will allow you to insert internal and external links, images, and footnotes. To code your article and format it as needed, visit: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Tutorial/Formatting. For example, to bold a word or phrase in your article, surround the word or phrase with three apostrophes. To create a heading, for example, add 2 ‘=’ signs before and after the heading title. For a subheading, include 3 ‘=’ signs before and after the subheading title.

Include accurate references so readers can verify the information. Because Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, you must include references for the information you include in your article. When choosing and referencing sources, always use your best judgment to ensure all your references are published sources with a reputation for reliability and accuracy. In some cases, the reliability and accuracy of a resource is subjective. In such cases, it may be helpful for you to do an internet search on the resource itself to better grasp how reliable people tend to believe it is. Fact-checking your information will also ensure that your references are sound and that you are providing the best information possible.

Proofread your article to ensure your spelling and grammar are sound. Before submitting your article, make sure you proofread to double-check your spelling, grammar, and formatting. Proper spelling and grammar will make your article easier to read and understand, and can also encourage future contributors and editors to follow suit. It may be helpful for you to copy and paste your article into a word processor so you can run it through a spelling and grammar check before submitting it. Be aware, however, that your word processor will likely read wiki text as incorrect.

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