Editorial Policy
Useful advice should show where its facts came from and where judgment begins.
Updated
Scope and authorship
Trytagly publishes practical guidance about TikTok hashtag research and measurement. Articles use the byline “Trytagly Editorial Team” so the site has one accountable editorial identity. The byline does not represent a claim about staff size or credentials.
Sources
We prefer primary sources such as TikTok Support and TikTok for Business. We link the source near the article or in a source list so readers can check changing platform details. Third-party commentary may help identify a question, but it is not treated as proof of a platform rule.
Drafting and review
Software tools may assist with outlining, research organization, or draft preparation. A draft is not considered reviewed merely because it is complete. Before publication, the operator checks factual claims, follows source links, removes unsupported examples, and evaluates whether the advice can be used as written.
We do not invent tests, clients, traffic, personal experience, or performance results. Examples are presented as examples unless they come from a cited source.
Corrections and updates
Substantial changes update the date shown on the article. When a platform feature disappears or a recommendation changes, we revise or remove the affected passage instead of changing the date alone.
Readers can report a factual error through the contact page. Corrections focus on the published claim; we do not promise individual strategy advice in response to every message.
Editorial independence
Trytagly does not currently publish sponsored articles. If commercial relationships or advertising are introduced, they will not change the requirement to distinguish documented facts from editorial recommendations. Paid placements, if any, will be labeled.