Authority Industries Directory: Purpose and Scope

The Authority Industries Directory operates as a structured, national-scope reference index covering vetted service providers and industry categories across the United States. This page explains how listings are evaluated for inclusion, how the directory is maintained over time, what falls outside its scope, and how it connects to the broader network of reference resources. Understanding these boundaries helps readers assess the directory's utility for research, comparison, and verification tasks.


Standards for Inclusion

Inclusion in the Authority Industries Directory is governed by a defined set of criteria applied consistently across all verticals and geographic regions. A listing must satisfy the following conditions before it appears in the index:

  1. Legal operational status — The provider must be a registered business entity or licensed professional operating lawfully under applicable federal, state, or local law in the jurisdiction where services are offered.
  2. Service specificity — The listing must correspond to a specific, identifiable service category recognized within the Authority Industries vertical categories taxonomy, not a generic or placeholder entry.
  3. Geographic verifiability — The provider's service area must be mappable to at least one US state or defined regional zone. National-scope providers must demonstrate documented service delivery across a minimum of 10 states.
  4. Public-record availability — At least one verifiable public-record source (state licensing board, business registry, accreditation body, or equivalent) must confirm the provider's identity and operational status.
  5. No active enforcement actions — Providers subject to unresolved regulatory enforcement orders from federal or state consumer protection agencies are excluded until resolution is documented.

The distinction between an included listing and an excluded one is not a judgment of business quality but a structural determination based on verifiability. A provider that meets all five criteria but operates in a single local market may appear in a regional sub-index rather than the national listing, consistent with the national scope service coverage model. Detailed explanations of each criterion are available at Authority Industries listing criteria.


How the Directory Is Maintained

The directory does not operate as a static publication. Listings are subject to periodic review on a structured cycle, with higher-traffic categories reviewed at a shorter interval than niche verticals. Maintenance activities include three core processes:

The Authority Industries data accuracy policy governs the standards applied during each review cycle and defines the evidentiary threshold required to update or remove a record. Maintenance is conducted against the directory's internal classification framework, which assigns each listing to one of the Authority Industries industry classifications used for cross-referencing and retrieval.

Readers who identify a listing that appears inaccurate or outdated can initiate a formal review through the Authority Industries dispute resolution process, which operates independently of any provider relationship.


What the Directory Does Not Cover

The Authority Industries Directory is a reference index, not a marketplace, lead-generation platform, or endorsement registry. Several categories of content fall explicitly outside its scope:


Relationship to Other Network Resources

The Authority Industries Directory does not function in isolation. It is one component within a coordinated network of reference properties, each serving a distinct informational function. The Authority Industries network overview describes how these properties are structured relative to one another.

Within the network, the directory's role is specifically to provide listing-level data: provider identity, service category, and geographic scope. Contextual and explanatory content — background on industries, regulatory frameworks, and terminology — is handled by topic-oriented resources, including the service authority terminology glossary and Authority Industries topic context pages.

Readers seeking to understand how to navigate the full resource set, rather than the directory specifically, should consult the how to use this Authority Industries resource guide, which maps each resource type to its intended use case. The directory and these supporting resources are maintained under shared editorial standards but serve non-overlapping functions — the directory indexes providers, while companion resources explain the industries and regulatory environments in which those providers operate.

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