Editorial desk

Who publishes this site and how pages get reviewed

Homeward India Editorial Desk publishes every page on this site against a narrow search job, visible source standard, and update policy designed for high-stakes relocation topics.

What readers should expect

Pages are reviewed for decisions, not for word count

Each article is expected to own one primary search job and avoid overlap with existing URLs.
High-stakes claims should point to primary sources, especially for tax, pensions, banking, customs, and school admissions.
Metadata, visible headings, structured data, and internal links should all describe the same page truth.
If source guidance changes materially, the page should be updated or narrowed instead of padded with filler.

Automation policy

Automation can assist the workflow, not replace the editorial obligation

Automation may be used for research support, structuring, outlining, and consistency checks. It is not used as a license to publish many pages with little original value.

Pages that use automation are still expected to disclose enough context for a reader to understand who published them, how the page was assembled, and why the page exists instead of another near-duplicate URL.

This matters even more because Google's guidance on site reputation abuse makes it clear that separate editorial surfaces should stand on their own merit rather than ride another property's established signals.

Update triggers

What causes a page to be reviewed again

A material change in official government or platform guidance.
Fresh query evidence showing that the page is earning impressions but missing clicks.
A cannibalization risk where two URLs start answering the same search job.
A better format becoming obvious, such as replacing prose with a checklist, table, or decision map.

Reference stack

Public guidance used by the desk