How to Judge Online Advice (Fast): 5 Checks That Save You Time

We’re all drowning in tips and “must-try” hacks. Here’s a quick way to tell what’s worth your time—without reading 20 tabs.

1) Source first, claim second

Who’s saying it? Look for a full name, credentials, and a track record. If the author is hidden or vague, be cautious.

2) Show me the proof

Good advice points to data, examples, or a clear process. Beware of big promises without any receipts.

3) Check the incentives

Is there a product push? That’s fine—just make sure the recommendation still makes sense without the sale.

4) Compare across two other sources

Spend 90 seconds skimming two reputable sites. If all three agree on the basics, you’re probably safe to act.

5) Action clarity test

If you can’t write the steps you’d take in under 30 seconds, the advice isn’t clear enough yet.


Quick checklist (save this)

  • Named author with credentials
  • Evidence or examples
  • Transparent motive
  • Two-source cross-check
  • Clear next steps

Bottom line: Smart action beats endless research. Start small, measure, refine.

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