The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica, mission and process.

The Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica

Page Contents

Our Editorial Process

Britannica has been a global leader in information since 1768. We’ve gone from publishing encyclopedia sets to selling CD-ROMs (which may seem even more quaint today than books) to going fully digital. What hasn’t changed is our commitment to being clear, fair, accurate, and relevant.

Why should you trust what you read at Britannica?

That’s a very fair question, and the fact that you thought to ask it means that you know that not all information is created equal. So consider: 

  • Britannica’s editorial staff is made up of writers and editors who have extensive knowledge in their fields, which range from geography to botany to technology and beyond.
  • Britannica commissions work from experts, including leading thinkers in academia and journalism. Notable contributions have come from Nobel laureates and world leaders. Think we’re blowing smoke? Jimmy Carter, the Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, Madeleine Albright, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, among others, have all written for Britannica.

It’s about our process as much as our people

  • Once an article is written, it is reviewed and revised by a team of editors.
  • Articles are edited to make sure that they cover the important points a reader needs to know, are written in an engaging way, and are fair, making clear not only what is known about a topic but also what may still be in dispute.
  • They are fact-checked according to a 14-point checklist to ensure that we have not only captured the big picture of a topic but also verified all the details.

Making sure it stays right

Unlike the days when the encyclopedia was printed and couldn’t be changed for upwards of a year, today editors at Britannica are continuously updating and revising content. 

  • When news happens, the relevant Britannica articles are updated by our staff editors or supplemented by a feed from our news partners. Our goal is to go deeper than the who, what, and when of a news event. We want Britannica to be the authoritative source for the context and history you need: the why and the how.
  • When we hear from readers about possible mistakes, we investigate and, when necessary, correct. (Mistakes happen, even with a highly exacting process. We are human, after all.) If you have feedback, let us know at [email protected] or by clicking on the feedback button that appears on articles.

Trust, but verify

If after reading all this, you’re still not sure about our process, know that we make it transparent to readers and users how, why, and when we revise articles. Just click on Article History in any article to see what has been done—from adding media to fixing the way an article appears on your phone to updating for developments and more.

New on Britannica

See all
HYBE Corp.
HYBE Corp. is a South Korean global entertainment company established in 2005 by Bang Si-hyuk, an entrepreneur, composer, and music executive. Founded as Big Hit Entertainment Co., Ltd., the company has grown to become a multinational corporation with subsidiaries specializing in music production
The Human Stain
The Human Stain, novel by American author Philip Roth that was published in 2000. It is the final book in Roth’s American Trilogy (the other two being American Pastoral [1997] and I Married a Communist [1998]), and it earned the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction. Like the other two novels in the
Susie Wiles
What are Susie Wiles’s notable achievements? Susie Wiles has helped numerous Republican candidates win elections. These include Presidents Ronald Reagan (1980), George H.W. Bush (1988), and Donald Trump (2016 and 2024). In addition, she helped Rick Scott (2010) and then Ron DeSantis (2018) become
Hiroshima
Hiroshima, groundbreaking nonfiction work written by American journalist John Hersey that was originally published in book form in 1946. It is often described as a pioneering work of New Journalism, in which the techniques used in fiction story-telling are used in nonfiction writing. It was also
Get Shorty
Get Shorty, crime novel and Hollywood satire written by American master of the literary thriller Elmore Leonard and published in 1990. In an irony worthy of Leonard himself, the 1995 movie version of Get Shorty, a story about the stupidity and vacuity of Hollywood filmmakers, became the best and
Capture of Savannah
Stalemate in their war with the Americans in the north and concern over French attacks against British-held Caribbean islands caused the British to focus on securing the southern American colonies during the American Revolution. A primary objective was the capture of the port of Savannah, in