Creating a Wikidata Entry
Session 5.3 · ~5 min read
Creating a Wikidata item is more straightforward than creating a Wikipedia article, but it still requires meeting certain standards. Wikidata has its own notability criteria, a clear creation process, and expectations for sourcing. This session walks through the entire workflow from account creation to a published, well-sourced entity item.
Wikidata Notability Requirements
Wikidata's notability standard is simpler than Wikipedia's. An item can be created if it meets at least one of these criteria:
- It has a corresponding article on any language edition of Wikipedia (or other Wikimedia project).
- It is a clearly identifiable conceptual or material entity that can be described using serious and publicly available references.
- It fulfills a structural need in Wikidata (for example, as a value for a property on another item).
For a business, criterion 2 is the most relevant. If your business is registered, has a website, appears in government registries, and has been mentioned in published sources, it meets Wikidata's notability threshold. You do not need newspaper coverage or awards. You need evidence that the entity exists and can be described with verifiable facts.
Wikidata notability is not the same as Wikipedia notability. Wikidata requires a clearly identifiable entity with publicly available references. Most registered businesses meet this standard. Do not confuse Wikidata's lower bar with Wikipedia's much stricter requirements.
The Creation Workflow
Account"] --> B["Wait 4+ Days
(Autoconfirmed)"] B --> C["Search Wikidata
for Existing Item"] C --> D{"Item exists?"} D -->|Yes| E["Edit Existing Item
(Add/Correct Data)"] D -->|No| F["Create New Item"] F --> G["Set Label, Description,
Aliases (EN + ID)"] G --> H["Add P31: instance of"] H --> I["Add Core Properties
(See Table)"] I --> J["Add References
for Each Statement"] J --> K["Review and
Publish"] K --> L["Monitor for
Editor Feedback"] style A fill:#222221,stroke:#c8a882,color:#ede9e3 style B fill:#222221,stroke:#8a8478,color:#ede9e3 style F fill:#222221,stroke:#6b8f71,color:#ede9e3 style G fill:#222221,stroke:#c8a882,color:#ede9e3 style J fill:#222221,stroke:#c47a5a,color:#ede9e3 style K fill:#222221,stroke:#6b8f71,color:#ede9e3
Step 1: Create an Account and Wait
Create an account at wikidata.org. New accounts cannot create items immediately. You need to become "autoconfirmed," which requires your account to be at least four days old and have made at least 50 edits. Spend those initial days making small, constructive edits to existing items (adding references, fixing typos, adding missing properties). This also builds your editor reputation.
Step 2: Search Before Creating
Before creating a new item, search Wikidata thoroughly. Use multiple name variations, abbreviations, and translations. If your entity already exists (even as a stub), edit the existing item rather than creating a duplicate. Duplicate items are merged or deleted by editors.
Step 3: Create the Item
Click "Create a new Item" on Wikidata. You will be prompted for:
- Label: The primary name of the entity (e.g., "PT Arsindo Cipta Karya").
- Description: A brief, factual description (e.g., "Indonesian engineering and manufacturing company").
- Aliases: Alternative names (e.g., "Arsindo", "Arsindo CK").
Set these in English first, then add labels and descriptions in other relevant languages (Indonesian, for example).
Step 4: Add the Minimum Viable Properties
The following table shows the minimum properties you should add for a credible business item. Add them in order of priority.
| Priority | Property | ID | What to Enter | Reference Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | instance of | P31 | company (Q783794) or business (Q4830453) | Government business registry |
| 2 | official website | P856 | Your primary domain URL | The website itself |
| 3 | country | P17 | Country item (e.g., Indonesia Q252) | Business registry, website |
| 4 | inception | P571 | Founding date | Business registry, about page |
| 5 | headquarters location | P159 | City/district item | Website contact page, registry |
| 6 | industry | P452 | Relevant industry item | Business registry, website |
| 7 | founded by | P112 | Founder's Wikidata item (create if needed) | Business registry, press |
| 8 | legal form | P1454 | Relevant legal form item (e.g., PT = limited liability company) | Business registry |
Step 5: Add References
Every statement needs at least one reference. Wikidata references follow a specific structure:
- Stated in: The source publication (if it has a Wikidata item).
- Reference URL: A direct link to the source.
- Retrieved: The date you accessed the source.
- Title: The title of the source page or document.
Acceptable reference sources include: government business registries, news articles, official company documents, published directories, and institutional databases. Your own website can serve as a reference for some properties (official website, headquarters), but third-party sources carry more weight.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
| Mistake | Why It Happens | What Happens Next |
|---|---|---|
| No references on statements | Perceived as unnecessary | Statements flagged for deletion, item may be nominated for deletion |
| Promotional description | Treating Wikidata like marketing | Description rewritten or item flagged |
| Creating duplicate items | Insufficient search before creating | Items merged, your edits may be lost |
| Adding unverifiable claims | Wanting a complete profile quickly | Statements removed, editor trust reduced |
| Bulk-adding properties without sources | Impatience | Account flagged for spam-like behavior |
After Creation: The First 30 Days
New items receive higher scrutiny from Wikidata's editor community. During the first month after creating your item:
- Monitor the item's talk page for editor comments or questions.
- Respond constructively to any feedback.
- Add additional properties gradually (one or two per week), each with proper references.
- Do not edit the item from multiple accounts. This looks like coordinated manipulation.
A well-sourced, accurately described item will survive editorial review. A promotional, poorly sourced item will not.
Further Reading
- Wikidata. "Wikidata: Notability." Wikidata Policies.
- Wikidata. "Help: Items." Wikidata Help.
- Wikidata. "Wikidata: Tours." Interactive tutorials for new editors.
- Wikidata. "Help: References." Wikidata Help.
Assignment
- Create a Wikidata account if you do not have one. Begin making constructive edits to existing items to reach autoconfirmed status.
- Prepare your item data using the minimum viable properties table. For each property, write the exact value and identify a published reference source.
- Search Wikidata to find the Q-numbers for all items you will link to (country, city, industry, legal form, etc.).
- Once autoconfirmed, create your item following the workflow. Add properties one at a time, each with references.
- Record your item's Q-number. You will need it for future sessions on external identifiers and entity linking.