CEO.wiki:Manual of Style: Difference between revisions
SuperAdmin1 (talk | contribs) Initial creation of Manual of Style page |
m Protected "CEO.wiki:Manual of Style" ([Edit=Allow only administrators] (indefinite) [Move=Allow only administrators] (indefinite)) |
||
| (One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
| Line 179: | Line 179: | ||
<source lang="wikitext"> | <source lang="wikitext"> | ||
The company reported revenue of $5 billion in 2023.<ref>{{cite news |last=Jones |first=Sarah |date=January 15, 2024 |title=TechCorp Reports Record Revenue |url=https:// | The company reported revenue of $5 billion in 2023.<ref>{{cite news |last=Jones |first=Sarah |date=January 15, 2024 |title=TechCorp Reports Record Revenue |url=https://www.forbes.com/sites/techcorp-reports-record-revenue |newspaper=Business Daily |access-date=January 20, 2024}}</ref> | ||
</source> | </source> | ||
Latest revision as of 02:47, 22 October 2025
The CEO.wiki Manual of Style provides guidelines for writing, formatting, and organizing articles. Following these standards ensures consistency and professionalism across the platform.
Article structure
Lead section
Every article should begin with a lead section that:
- Summarizes the most important aspects of the topic
- Stands alone as a concise overview
- Does not require readers to click links to understand the basics
- Includes the article title in bold in the first sentence
- Is typically 1-4 paragraphs depending on article length
Example:
- 'John Smith (born January 1, 1970) is an American business executive who has served as CEO of TechCorp since 2020. He previously held leadership positions at DataSystems and InnovateCo, and is known for transforming struggling technology companies.
Section organization
Organize articles logically with clear headings:
For CEO biographies:
- Lead section
- Early life and education
- Career
- Early career
- CEO tenure at [Company]
- Later positions
- Business philosophy or management style (if notable)
- Compensation (if publicly disclosed and notable)
- Controversies (if applicable)
- Personal life (brief, business-relevant only)
- References
- External links
For Company articles:
- Lead section
- History
- Products and services
- Corporate affairs
- Leadership
- Headquarters and facilities
- Subsidiaries
- Financial performance
- Controversies (if applicable)
- References
- External links
Writing style
Tone
- Formal and professional: Avoid colloquialisms and casual language
- Neutral: Present facts without advocacy or promotion
- Encyclopedic: Informative and comprehensive, not entertaining
- Direct: Clear and concise, avoiding unnecessary words
Good: "Johnson led the company through a restructuring that reduced costs by 30%."
Bad: "Johnson brilliantly executed an amazing transformation that saved the company."
Person and tense
- Write in third person (never first or second person)
- Use past tense for historical events
- Use present tense for current positions and ongoing situations
Correct: "Smith serves as CEO and has implemented new policies."
Incorrect: "Smith is serving as CEO and implemented new policies."
Voice
Prefer active voice over passive voice when possible:
Active: "The board appointed Johnson as CEO."
Passive: "Johnson was appointed as CEO by the board."
Avoid peacock terms
Don't use subjective promotional language:
Avoid: legendary, world-class, prestigious, renowned, acclaimed, iconic, groundbreaking, revolutionary (unless quoting)
Prefer: factual descriptions with citations
Titles and names
People
- Use the full name on first mention: "Elizabeth Johnson"
- Use last name only thereafter: "Johnson"
- Include middle initials only if commonly used: "John Q. Public"
- Don't use courtesy titles (Mr., Ms., Dr.) except in direct quotes
Companies
- Use the official legal name on first mention
- Use common shortened form thereafter if widely recognized
- Include legal suffixes (Inc., Corp., Ltd.) on first mention
- Don't include "The" unless it's officially part of the name
Job titles
- Capitalize formal titles before names: "Chief Executive Officer Jane Doe"
- Use lowercase when after names or standalone: "Jane Doe, chief executive officer"
- Use standard abbreviations: CEO, CFO, COO (not C.E.O.)
Numbers and dates
Numbers
- Spell out one through nine: "five companies"
- Use numerals for 10 and above: "15 employees"
- Use numerals for percentages, measurements, money: "5 percent," "$7 million"
- Use commas for numbers 1,000 and above: "1,000,000 users"
- Use "billion" and "million" rather than numerals: "$1.5 billion" not "$1,500,000,000"
Dates
- Format: "January 15, 2024" (Month Day, Year)
- Use full year: "2024" not "'24"
- Spell out months: "January" not "Jan."
- Include "as of" dates for time-sensitive information: "as of March 2024"
Currency
- Use appropriate symbols: $, €, £, ¥
- Specify currency when ambiguous: "US$1 million" or "CAD $50,000"
- Include historical context for older figures: "$1 million ($2.5 million in 2024 dollars)"
Formatting
Headings
- Use sentence case: "Early life and education" not "Early Life and Education"
- Don't skip heading levels (don't jump from == to ====)
- Don't use headings for single sentences
- Keep headings concise and descriptive
Lists
Use bulleted lists for unordered items:
- Like this
- And this
Use numbered lists for sequential items or rankings:
- First item
- Second item
Emphasis
- Use bold for the article title in the first sentence
- Use italics for emphasis (sparingly)
- Don't use ALL CAPS for emphasis
- Don't use underline
Quotes
- Use blockquotes for quotes longer than four lines
- Include attribution and citations
- Use quotation marks for shorter quotes
- Ensure quotes are verbatim and properly attributed
Citations and references
When to cite
Citations are required for:
- Direct quotations
- Statistics and financial data
- Controversial or disputed claims
- Information likely to be challenged
- Specific facts (dates, numbers, events)
Citation style
CEO.wiki uses inline citations with the <ref> tag:
<source lang="wikitext"> The company reported revenue of $5 billion in 2023.[1] </source>
Reference section
Always include a == References == section at the end with:
<source lang="wikitext">
References
- ↑ <ref>"TechCorp Reports Record Revenue".{Template:Newspaper.January 15, 2024.Retrieved January 20, 2024.</ref>
</source>
Source quality
See Reliable sources for guidance on acceptable sources. Prefer:
- Major news organizations
- Business publications
- Official corporate filings
- Academic journals
- Reputable books
Links
Internal links
- Link relevant terms on first occurrence in the article
- Don't overlink - link only terms likely to help readers
- Don't link common words readers likely understand
- Link company names and people with articles on CEO.wiki
- Don't link dates unless specifically relevant
External links
Include an == External links == section for:
- Official company website
- Official executive biography pages
- Major profile pages (Bloomberg, Forbes, etc.)
Don't include:
- Social media pages (except in citations)
- Promotional sites
- Unreliable sources
- Dead links
Images
Image use
Images should:
- Be relevant to the article content
- Have proper licensing for reuse
- Include captions describing what is shown
- Be placed near related text
Image size
Use standard thumbnail size: <source lang="wikitext">

</source>
Image captions
- Use complete sentences ending with periods
- Describe what is shown without restating article text
- Include dates for historical images
Categories
Every article should have at least one category:
<source lang="wikitext"> </source>
Place categories at the bottom of the article.
Common mistakes
Avoid
- Promotional language: "leading," "best," "premier"
- Weasel words: "some say," "many believe"
- Vague terms: "recently," "soon," "currently" (use specific dates)
- Editorializing: personal opinions or judgments
- Redundancy: repeating the same information
- Excessive detail: minutiae not relevant to understanding the subject
Do
- State facts clearly with citations
- Maintain neutral point of view
- Write concisely and directly
- Use specific dates and numbers
- Present multiple viewpoints fairly
- Focus on notable, significant information
Specific guidelines
Financial information
When reporting financial data:
- Use official sources (SEC filings, annual reports)
- Specify the time period
- Include context (year-over-year change, industry comparison)
- Convert to a common currency when comparing
Controversies
When covering controversies:
- Present all sides fairly
- Use reliable secondary sources
- Avoid sensationalism
- Include outcome/resolution when applicable
- Maintain neutral tone
Compensation
When discussing executive compensation:
- Use official proxy filings as sources
- Include total compensation, not just salary
- Provide context (company size, industry norms)
- Note disclosure requirements and reporting periods
Templates
CEO.wiki provides templates for common elements:
{{cite news}}- News article citations{{cite web}}- Website citations{{cite book}}- Book citations{{reflist}}- Reference list{{DEFAULTSORT:Lastname, Firstname}}- Category sorting
Accessibility
Make articles accessible:
- Provide alt text for images
- Use clear, descriptive link text (not "click here")
- Structure content with proper headings
- Write clear, concise sentences
- Avoid jargon when possible