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SiteLensAI Editorial Team

This profile explains how our English articles, watch pages, resources, and question pages are reviewed so visible dates, structured data, and body copy stay aligned.

Reviewed by SiteLensAI Editorial Team

Scope research and editorial review

Published Apr 14, 2026 Updated Apr 17, 2026 Author profile
A team collaborating around laptops and notes.
The editorial layer focuses on search intent, scope clarity, and operational accuracy. Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash

Decision board

The practical signals on this page

Role Editorial review and scope research
Coverage Pricing, rollout, comparison, inquiry prep
Updated 2026-04-17

Decision prompts

Questions that keep the scope honest

These prompts help the visitor move from broad interest into scope, comparison, and a cleaner inquiry without skipping the messy operational details.

Read

What this team reviews: We review English topic hubs, articles, watch pages, and question pages against the same practical standards: clear phase-one boundaries, ho

Read

How the editorial process works: Our editorial pass checks whether the page answers one commercially relevant question clearly, whether the next click is obvious, and whethe

Research surfaces

A structured English surface, not a translated brochure

01

Read the topic hubs

Start with the ordered website, MVP, and chatbot hubs we review first.

Open playbooks
02

See recurring questions

Our question layer turns recurring buyer confusion into focused long-tail answers.

Open question hub

Analysis layers

The structure behind the decision

What this team reviews

We review English topic hubs, articles, watch pages, and question pages against the same practical standards: clear phase-one boundaries, honest cost drivers, visible dates, and next-step paths that do not trap the visitor in one page.

Pricing and scope pages are checked against operational assumptions, not just keywords.
Visible dates and schema dates are kept aligned when pages are updated.
Question and resource pages are tied back into topic hubs instead of floating as isolated content.

How the editorial process works

Our editorial pass checks whether the page answers one commercially relevant question clearly, whether the next click is obvious, and whether the visitor can move from cost into comparison, prep, or resource actions without friction.

One page should answer one main search intent directly.
Structured data should match what the visitor actually sees.
New English pages should strengthen a cluster, not create thin repetition.