Editorial Policy

Best Time Converter is edited around one standard: the content should help a real person make a clearer scheduling decision. We avoid publishing pages simply because a keyword exists. Guides are written to address concrete situations such as scheduling US–Europe calls, announcing webinars, avoiding daylight saving confusion, or setting remote-team meeting norms.

How this site should be used

Tool pages explain limitations because time-zone conversion depends on dates, regional rules, device behavior, and calendar software. Important meetings should always be confirmed in the final calendar system used by attendees. When we describe examples, they are intended for planning and education, not as professional, legal, employment, travel, or business advice.

Limitations and corrections

Corrections can be sent to [email protected]. We prioritize issues that could cause users to misunderstand a meeting time, date change, daylight saving transition, or event announcement.

Why this matters for trust

Time-zone mistakes are small until they are not. A missed client call can damage confidence. A bad webinar announcement can lower attendance. A recurring meeting at the edge of someone’s day can make a remote team feel unfair. Best Time Converter is built around reducing those avoidable mistakes with clear tools, plain-language guidance, and honest limitations.

Maintenance approach

The site is maintained as a focused resource, not a mass-generated directory. New pages should have a practical reason to exist, and weak pages should be revised or removed. Feedback about confusing examples, accessibility barriers, broken links, or unclear tool behavior can be sent to the contact email.

Quality standard

A page should earn its place by helping with a specific scheduling scenario. We prefer fewer useful guides over many thin pages. Content should include practical examples, plain-language caveats, and links to the tool or guide that helps the reader take the next step.