Internet Speed Test Editorial Team
The Internet Speed Test Editorial Team researches, writes, and maintains every page on Internet Speed Test.
Who We Are
The Internet Speed Test Editorial Team is a collective of writers and editors focused on internet connectivity, home networking, and consumer broadband topics. Rather than publishing under individual invented bylines, we attribute all site content to our team collectively, reflecting the collaborative research and editing process behind every page.
Our Process
Each country and guide page starts from real, aggregated search-demand data, is cross-checked against current publicly available networking and broadband standards, and is reviewed before publication for accuracy and clarity. We revisit and update pages periodically as broadband technology, typical speeds, and terminology evolve.
Editorial Independence
Internet Speed Test is not affiliated with any single internet service provider, and our content is not influenced by any ISP relationship. Any affiliate or advertising relationships on this site are clearly separated from our editorial content and never influence the accuracy of a speed test result or the substance of our written guides.
Contact the Team
If you have a correction, question, or suggestion for a page on this site, please reach out via our contact page we review and respond to editorial feedback directly.
How the Team Grows
As Internet Speed Test's country coverage expands, our editorial process scales with it: new country pages follow the same research and review workflow as our original launch markets, ensuring consistency in accuracy and tone across all 164 country pages regardless of when they were added.
Feedback Shapes Our Content
Reader-submitted corrections and questions directly influence which guides and glossary entries we prioritize updating. If several visitors from the same country flag a similar issue, that page moves up our review queue.
A Note on Accuracy
Networking is a fast-moving field, and typical broadband speeds shift meaningfully year to year as infrastructure improves. We'd rather correct a page promptly than leave outdated figures live, so reader corrections are treated as a priority signal, not an afterthought.
Why We Attribute Content to the Team
Many sites in this space attribute content to a single named "expert" author, sometimes with fabricated credentials. We deliberately avoid this practice: every page on Internet Speed Test reflects collective research and editing rather than one individual's claimed expertise, and we'd rather be transparent about our collaborative process than invent a persona for the sake of appearing more authoritative.
Standards We Follow
Our written guides and glossary definitions are checked against current, publicly documented networking standards and terminology (Mbps, latency, jitter, and related concepts are defined consistently with how the broader networking and ISP industry uses them). Country pages are grounded in real, aggregated search-demand patterns rather than assumptions about what a given market wants to know.