Editorial
Editorial Standards
The rules behind every calculator, benchmark, and article published on aibizhub.io. Enforced by code review, grep, and the content validator.
Voice
Target: understated, technical, direct. The reader already runs a business, side project, or micro-SaaS. We give them the numbers, the source, and the limits — not pep talks or venture-twitter aphorisms.
- Understated, technical, direct — solo-founder to solo-founder. Numbers first, no hype.
- No corporate jargon (`leverage`, `empower`, `seamless`, `solutions for`, `industry-leading`, `synergy`).
- No AI slop (`delve`, `tapestry`, `robust` unless fault-tolerant, `unlock`, `navigate these topics`, `in today's landscape`).
- No hustle-culture vocabulary (`10x your`, `hustle`, `grind`, `crush it`, `side hustle` — use `side project`, `supercharge`, `effortlessly`, `ninja`, `rockstar`).
- No prescriptive framing — we run the numbers, the reader makes the call.
- No personal launch logs, MRR screenshots, or venture-twitter voice.
Claims — what we can and can't say
- Never publish invented numbers as executed measurements. Every benchmark links to a named source and year.
- Never claim a cadence we cannot commit to. No 'weekly cadence', 'coming soon', 'new tools every month'.
- Cut unsupportable claims rather than hedge them. The urban legend '90% of A/B tests yield inconclusive results' has no peer-reviewed source; we do not publish it with soft language. The misquoted Reichheld '5% retention = 25–95% profit boost' is context-dependent; it is replaced with specific, sourced claims.
- Hedge honestly where warranted: `roughly`, `as of 2026`, `the OpenView 2024 survey of 1,000 SaaS operators suggests`.
- No 'peer-reviewed' labeling on surveys, consulting reports, or vendor telemetry.
Source hierarchy
Enforced by
scripts/validate-content.mjs
in requirePrimarySource
mode. Vendor-blog domains fail CI. Branded reports without verifiable URLs warn.
-
1. Primary academic
DOI, arXiv, SSRN, PubMed, peer-reviewed journal URLs — preferred for any 'research shows' claim.
-
2. Authoritative primary
BLS OEWS/ECEC, Fed FRED, SEC EDGAR, ECB, SBA, Eurostat, UK ONS, national statistical offices. Live, verifiable URLs.
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3. Verifiable branded reports
First Round State of Startups, OpenView SaaS Benchmarks, SaaS Capital Annual Survey, Bessemer Cloud Index, CB Insights — only where the specific report is publicly linked.
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4. Textbooks with chapter/section citation
Named chapter URLs from Wiley, O'Reilly, and equivalent.
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5. Founder case studies with named authorship
Indie Hackers profiles, founder blog posts with quoted metrics, Product Hunt launches with verifiable traction.
-
Never
Vendor-marketing blogs (VWO, Optimizely, HubSpot blog, Mailchimp resources, WordStream), paywalled HBR without a summary we can cite, Forbes contributor posts, 'McKinsey 2024 insights' without a URL, unlinked 'studies show'.
Meta descriptions + titles
Meta descriptions target 140–155 characters with the primary keyword
in the first 60 characters. No `no signup / no tracking` tails — they
burn SERP real estate without keyword value. Article titles are ≤60
characters (aim ≤55). Enforced by
scripts/audit-meta-descriptions.mjs.
Compliance
Calculators compute deterministic math from user inputs. Output is
general business information, not legal, tax, or financial advice.
Consult a licensed professional for your specific situation. No
personalised output; nothing profiles the reader. Pricing data in
the AI Stack Cost Calculator carries an
AS_OF_DATE
constant and surfaces a refresh warning when stale beyond 90 days.
Benchmarks older than 18 months are flagged as dated.
Corrections
Dated and append-only at /corrections/. Never silently rewritten. When a benchmark re-sources, a pricing number drifts, or a claim is cut, a dated entry is added to the corrections log.
What doesn't ship
- Personal launch diaries, founder-porn anecdotes, vanity-metric celebrations.
- Urban-legend statistics (the 90%-of-A/B-tests claim, the misquoted Reichheld retention-profit claim, 'users form habits in 21 days').
- Tautological claims ('improvement in X correlates with improvement in X') or circular causation.
- 'Peer-reviewed' labeling on surveys, consulting reports, or vendor telemetry.
- Sponsored content without the `Sponsored` / `Affiliate` chip rendered inline.
- Any UI claim we cannot defend on an honest audit. Boring-but-true over punchy-but-risky.
- Tools without a methodology page linked from them.
Conflict of interest
AI Biz Hub is a self-funded, independent publication. There are no active sponsors, affiliate links, or paid placements. The current state and the rules that apply if that ever changes are documented at /sponsor-disclosure/.
Contact
Factual corrections, methodology disputes, and sponsor inquiries: see the contact details at /about/.