We would rather be accurate than look infallible. This page explains how to report a factual error, how fast we respond, how we verify it, and how we mark a correction once it is made.
Published: 26 June 2026 · Last updated: 26 June 2026
If something we have published is factually wrong — a number, a date, a name, a definition, a description of how a clause works — we want to know, and we will correct it. Accuracy matters more to us than an unblemished archive.
Email editorial@tsaexit.com with the page URL, the specific statement you believe is incorrect, and, where possible, a source or your reasoning. You can also reach us through the contact form. We read every correction request from a reader.
We aim to acknowledge a correction request within five business days and to resolve clear factual errors promptly once verified. More complex or contested points may take longer because we check them against primary sources and practitioner experience before changing published copy.
When we correct a material error of fact in a published article, we revise the text and update the article's “Updated” date. For significant corrections that change the meaning of what a reader previously saw, we add a brief, dated correction note so the change is transparent rather than silent. Minor fixes — typography, broken links, formatting — are made without a note.
Much of our content is professional judgment: how we would approach a separation, where we think leverage sits, what we would prioritize on Day One. We will correct facts. We will also consider, but will not necessarily change, points that are matters of professional opinion — though we welcome the challenge and will say so where reasonable people in the field disagree.
This policy covers the accuracy of our published content. It is separate from our Disclaimer (the limits of relying on this content), our Privacy Policy, and our Terms. For client engagement matters, contact the firm directly.
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