Wikipedia doesn’t approve pages because someone is important — it approves them because independent, reliable sources have already written about the subject in enough depth. That’s the notability test, and it’s the first thing to get right before drafting anything.
Once notability is established, the draft itself has to read in a neutral, encyclopedic tone: no promotional language, no unsourced claims, and every fact tied to a citation a reviewer can check.
Pages go through a review queue, and editors will often ask for more sourcing before accepting a draft. That back-and-forth is normal — it’s what keeps Wikipedia’s standards consistent, and it’s exactly what our Wikipedia biography service is built to handle.