Featured Articles (FAs) showcase wikiHow's very best work. Every
day a new featured article is displayed on the
home page and on the RSS feed. Thousands of
people will read a featured article on the day it is showcased. Our
most popular featured articles have been read by over a million
people and more than four hundred articles have been read by over
one hundred thousand people. If you already know
how to write a new article on
wikiHow, or you're editing an article that's already been
written, you can go the extra mile and bring that article up to FA
quality.
- Start a new article or edit an existing one to bring it up to
featured status. Turning a stub into an Featured Article is an
especially rewarding challenge.
- Define the topic. Before you invest your energy into a
particular title, do a little homework to make sure you're not
reinventing the wheel. There might already be an existing article
on wikiHow written on the very same topic, in which case your work
might get merged to that title. If a wikiHow search turns up
similar titles, you have two options:
- Merge the articles that
are on the same topic into one high-quality how-to that you can
then polish into an FA. (Be sure to follow the merge
policy!)
-
Put a unique twist on the topic. Read the merge
policy carefully so that you understand what makes a topic
distinct enough to remain un-merged, but not so specific
that it's considered a vanity page (which would get nominated for
deletion). For example, let's say you want to write an FA on "How
to Build a Boat" but there is already an article titled "How to
Construct a Boat." Instead of changing the title of yours to
something like "How to Build a Boat, Billy's Way" (which would get
merged or deleted), narrow down your topic to a specific kind of
boat: "How to Build a Row Boat" or to a specific set of conditions:
"How to Build a New Boat from Old Parts."
- Research your topic on the
Internet or in a library. Find reliable books or websites you can
cite as a reference source. As a
general rule, facts cannot be copyrighted. This means that
you are able to use any facts you find to support your
article.[1]
-

Make sure the steps are clear and in order.
Review the instructions carefully. Does the article stick to the
wikiHow format as described in the Writer's Guide? Are the steps clear,
giving the reader just enough information to get the job done, but
not so much that the reader gets distracted or bogged down by
background information? Are spelling and grammar in good
shape?
- Provide additional information in the appropriate sections:
- Tips - Offer any additional background information or tidbits
of advice that are optional and that don't fit as a "step" in the
given procedure.
- Warnings - Describe any possible dangers and risks relating to
the steps involved, and explain how they can be prevented.
- Related wikiHows - Choose wikiHow articles that are of at least
decent quality (nothing marked as a stub, in need of copyediting or
formatting, etc.). If you discover a past featured article that is
related to the topic, by all means, include it!
-

Tools and equipment go here.
Things You'll Need - Use this section only for necessary supplies.
It is also possible to list ingredients. This section is optional
and is not always useful. Do list physical objects; don't list
concepts, qualities, or ideas (a sense of humor, a good attitude).
If a positive attitude does matter, that information might fit
better in a tip.
-

Half a cup of crunchy peanut butter.
Ingredients - Use this section only for food ingredients, and give
exact quantities and any necessary descriptions: one cup of celery,
chopped finely. If it is not food but equipment (a wooden spoon,
duct tape, goggles), put it in Things You'll Need, instead.
- Sources and Citations - Link to websites you used while
researching this page. Also use the section for copyright
permission attribution if you legally imported any content. See
the external link guidelines for
details.
-

Pictures are worth 1000 words (and an FA nomination)
Add pictures! Images make an article
shine. Most instructions will benefit from being supplemented by
photos, illustrations, or diagrams, and some are difficult to
visualize without some type of visual aid, but don't add images
that are irrelevant just to have them there. Remember to use only
photos you took yourself or photos from freely licensed sources,
which you can find through
wikiHow. If you didn't take the photo yourself, be sure to
attribute it correctly.
- Cite references you used while
researching the article. References make a difference in the
article's credibility and they're a good antidote to folk wisdom
and wild claims. Be sure to choose credible
references.
-

Many heads are better than one.
Invite other wikiHow community members to help improve your page by
leaving them messages on their talk pages or asking for volunteer
editors at the forums. As you're improving the quality of the
instructions, you may wish to consult with other editors on wikiHow
and ask for their input. If you know that an active contributor on
wikiHow might know a lot about the topic at hand, ask them nicely
if they'd fact check the article and let
you know if it's missing something. Likewise, if you know of a
contributor with a particular talent, like a knack for grammar or
formatting, ask them to help, too. While collaboration is not a
requirement for the selection of a Featured Article, the general
wikiHow belief is that every contribution creates a more complete
and informative article.
- Nominate
the article to be featured. Write {{fac}} on the discussion
page (not anywhere in the article). "FAC" stands for
Featured Article Candidate. This notice will automatically add the
article to the list of others being considered.
- Read comments on discussion pages written by other wikiHow
community members. Some will comment about the merits of featured
article while some will criticize it. Respond to their praise and
criticisms in a civil manner. Keep in mind that not all pages can
be selected as a featured article and all criticism on wikiHow is
meant to improve the quality of the article and is not a criticism
of your abilities. Try to use the feedback to improve the quality
of the article.
- Wait. If the community decides to approve the page as a
featured page, it can take several weeks or even months for the
page to make it to the top of the featured page list. If the
article doesn't get featured within 2 months, any editor may then
remove the FAC template. Don't feel like you did a bad job though.
Sometimes, certain topics just don't have wide enough appeal, or
may be too controversial to be appropriate as an FA. Take pride in
knowing that you've helped create a high-quality, complete and
helpful how-to that excels as an example of what wikiHow
contributors can accomplish together.
- wikiHow Featured Articles are displayed on the wikiHow home
page and the RSS feed which is shown on the Google Personalized
Home pages and the MyYahoo page of thousands of readers.
- You may view all candidate pages at this current list of featured
article candidates or this list of all past featured articles.
- Consider bolding the first sentence of each step. It can
make the article look better and easier to skim for readers. This
works best when each step is fairly substantial and the article is
long.
[edit]
Warnings
- Unfortunately, not all pages nominated for featured article can
be selected to run on the home page.
- Because of the high traffic they generate, featured articles
may attract vandals (those who deliberately damage pages) and
trolls (those who try to stir up controversy, particularly in the
discussion page). Do not take these attacks personally. Do
incorporate valid suggestions, if possible.
[edit]
Sources and Citations
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