What the editorial desk is responsible for
The editorial desk is the publishing layer behind the site. It is responsible for keeping the topic scope narrow, making sure calculators and guides align with each other, and reviewing updates before they go live.
- Reviewing formulas and calculator wording for consistency.
- Checking that a guide actually answers the decision behind the query, not just the headline.
- Refreshing update dates when the page changes materially.
- Handling correction requests, broken links, and reader feedback.
Why the site keeps a narrow subject area
MyCalcVault focuses on a small number of recurring consumer finance questions rather than publishing across every money topic. That is a deliberate editorial choice. A narrower scope makes it easier to keep pages internally consistent and genuinely useful.
It also helps readers understand what the site is and is not trying to cover. Broad sites often end up feeling generic. Narrow sites can build more trust when they stay inside their lane.
How pages are reviewed before publication
| Review area | What the desk checks |
|---|---|
| Math and logic | Whether calculator outputs are consistent with the intended formula and page explanation. |
| Clarity | Whether the page explains what is included, excluded, and what decision the tool is actually good for. |
| Internal linking | Whether the page sends the reader to a sensible next step instead of leaving them at a dead end. |
| Trust signals | Whether the page points clearly to the relevant about, methodology, contact, and policy pages. |
What the byline does and does not mean
The MyCalcVault Editorial Desk byline means the page belongs to the site's publishing workflow and has been reviewed for clarity, internal consistency, and topic fit. It does not mean the page is a substitute for licensed professional advice tailored to an individual's full situation.
How to request a correction
If you spot a formula issue, outdated statement, unclear phrase, or broken link, email the site through the contact address and include the page URL plus a short description of what seems wrong. Calculation concerns are easiest to review when you also include the inputs you used.