What this policy is here to do
This page explains the standards behind the site. It exists to make the project easier to understand for readers, search engines, and anyone reviewing how the content is produced.
The main goal is simple: publish pages that help international patients understand the rhinoplasty journey in Istanbul more clearly, without turning uncertainty into hype.
How topics are chosen
Topics are selected around real research questions, practical planning concerns, recovery uncertainty, and clinic-comparison needs. That means pages are built around helpful questions such as how long to stay in Istanbul after rhinoplasty or when a return flight may feel realistic, not around stuffing as many keywords as possible onto one page.
How the tone is controlled
The site avoids exaggerated sales language, pressure-driven calls to action, and unrealistic promises. It aims to sound reassuring, specific, and measured. Pages should feel readable on a phone, emotionally steady, and useful to someone who is still deciding how to research the process.
How pages are updated
Existing pages are reviewed when the site structure changes, when new support pages are added, or when internal links can be improved. The goal is not constant rewriting for the sake of it, but keeping clusters such as recovery, planning, and clinic comparison clear and consistent.
What this site does not do
- It does not publish sensational “best clinic” style pages.
- It does not promise medical outcomes.
- It does not treat search optimization as a substitute for usefulness.
- It does not aim to overwhelm readers with thin or repetitive pages.
Frequently asked questions
Is this site written as medical advice?
No. The content is informational and designed to support research, planning, and clearer expectations, not to replace clinical advice.
Does the site publish sales-first content?
No. The editorial policy is built around calm, useful guidance rather than aggressive conversion language.