Editorial Policy
How Core Concrete Group prepares, reviews and updates concrete service content, guides, pricing information and website pages.
Our website content is written to help users understand concrete work clearly, including preparation, site conditions, durability, finish expectations, common causes of failure and quote considerations.
- Concrete-specific content focused on driveways, slabs, polished concrete, repairs, cutting and exposed aggregate.
- Pricing information is treated as general guidance, not a fixed quote for every site.
- Pages are reviewed for clarity, usefulness, internal links and alignment with the site’s concrete focus.
1. Purpose of this policy
This Editorial Policy explains how Core Concrete Group prepares, reviews and updates website content about concrete services, concrete guides, location pages and quote-related information.
The site is built around a clear area of expertise: concrete. That includes concrete driveways, concrete slabs, polished concrete, concrete repairs, concrete cutting, exposed aggregate, preparation, durability and concrete performance.
Last updated: May 2026.
2. Why we publish concrete content
We publish concrete content because many project decisions are easier when users understand what affects the final result. A driveway, slab or polished concrete floor should not be explained only by appearance or square metre pricing.
Preparation, ground conditions, moisture, drainage, access, reinforcement, surface condition and intended use all matter. The purpose of the website is to explain those decision points in plain language so users can make better enquiries and compare options more clearly.
Users can browse the main concrete services or read practical information through the concrete guides.
3. Our content scope
The site stays focused on concrete work. This keeps the information clearer and helps each page support the next one.
The site covers
- concrete driveways
- polished concrete
- concrete slabs
- concrete repairs
- concrete cutting
- exposed aggregate
- concrete costs and durability
- preparation, drainage, movement and finish expectations
The site avoids
- broad landscaping advice
- general renovation content
- unrelated building topics
- exaggerated claims
- generic “best contractor” style pages
- fixed technical advice without site context
4. How service pages are prepared
Service pages are written to match real user questions and practical project decisions. They should explain what affects the work, not just state that the service is available.
A concrete driveway page should explain drainage, slope, edge support, finish selection and movement. A polished concrete page should explain slab condition, grinding, aggregate exposure and realistic finish expectations. A concrete slab page should explain compaction, reinforcement, intended load and long-term movement.
Pages for concrete repairs, concrete cutting and exposed aggregate should also stay concrete-specific and explain the conditions that affect the work.
5. How guide content is prepared
Guide content is created to help users understand cost factors, material behaviour, finish comparisons, durability and practical project decisions. Guides are written to support user understanding, not to replace a site-specific quote or inspection.
Examples include our concrete driveway cost guide, concrete cost per m² guide, concrete durability guide, polished concrete vs tiles guide and exposed aggregate pros and cons guide.
6. Pricing and cost information
Concrete pricing depends heavily on site conditions. Preparation, access, removal, compaction, reinforcement, drainage, finish selection and slab condition can all change the cost.
For that reason, our pricing content is written as general guidance rather than a fixed quote. A number that suits one site may be misleading for another site with different access, ground conditions, concrete removal or finish requirements.
For project-specific information, users should request a quote through the contact page. The planned quoting process page explains how enquiry details help form a more useful response.
7. How we handle city-specific concrete content
Local pages should not be simple rewrites with a city name changed. City-specific concrete content should explain local conditions where they affect the work.
Brisbane pages should naturally discuss rainfall, humidity, moisture and runoff. Perth pages should discuss sandy ground, compaction, heat and edge support. Other city pages should also reflect practical site conditions where relevant.
Location pages should link clearly to relevant city service pages so users and search engines can understand the relationship between the national service layer, city hubs and specialised local service pages. The full location structure can be browsed from the locations hub.
8. Accuracy and practical limitations
Concrete work depends on the actual site. Ground conditions, existing concrete, access, drainage, intended load and finish expectations all affect the right recommendation.
Website content can explain the decision points, but it cannot replace a proper project assessment. Structural requirements, slab design, engineering requirements or local compliance issues may require project-specific professional advice.
The content on this website should be treated as general information. It should not be treated as engineering, legal or site-specific construction advice.
9. Review and update process
We review website content periodically and when major changes are made to services, locations, guides or internal links. Updates may include clearer explanations, corrected links, revised examples or improved page structure.
Content may also be updated when a page becomes unclear, when internal linking changes, when new guides are added, or when a better explanation would help users understand the concrete topic more accurately.
10. Use of AI-assisted content
Core Concrete Group may use writing, editing or research tools to help draft or refine website content. Content is still reviewed before publication for clarity, accuracy, relevance and alignment with the business’s concrete service focus.
AI-assisted drafting does not replace editorial review. Pages should still be checked for practical usefulness, internal link accuracy, service relevance and plain-language clarity before publication.
11. Internal linking standards
Internal links are added where they help users move to a related service, city page, guide or contact path. Links should be contextual, not random.
The site uses internal links to reinforce relationships between driveways, slabs, polished concrete, repairs, cutting and exposed aggregate. Footer links support company, service, resource and location discovery.
Users can browse the main services hub, locations hub, guides hub or contact page.
12. Methodology and preparation pages
Some support pages are designed to explain how Core Concrete Group thinks about concrete work before a quote or project decision is made.
The concrete work methodology page explains how concrete projects are assessed. The concrete preparation standards page explains why preparation, compaction, drainage and slab condition matter. The quoting process page explains what information helps produce a more useful quote response.
13. Corrections and feedback
Users can report unclear wording, broken links, outdated service information, incorrect business details, privacy concerns or content issues.
Corrections and feedback can be sent to enquiries@coreconcretegroup.com.au or submitted through the contact page.
14. Relationship with privacy information
This Editorial Policy explains content standards and website publishing practices. It does not replace the site’s privacy information.
For information about how enquiry details, email communication, contact forms and Google Search Console data are handled, read the Privacy Policy.
15. Contact details
If you have a question about this Editorial Policy or want to report a website content issue, contact Core Concrete Group using the details below.
Frequently asked questions
Why does Core Concrete Group have an editorial policy?
The editorial policy explains how website content is prepared, reviewed and updated so users can understand concrete services, guides and pricing information clearly.
Is the website content a substitute for a quote or inspection?
No. Website content is general information. Concrete work depends on site conditions, access, preparation, drainage, intended use and finish expectations, so accurate recommendations usually require project-specific assessment.
How is pricing information handled?
Pricing content is written as general guidance because concrete costs vary by site, city, preparation, access, finish, removal work and project size.
Can users report corrections?
Yes. Users can report unclear content, outdated information or broken links by contacting enquiries@coreconcretegroup.com.au.
Does Core Concrete Group publish content outside concrete work?
The site is intentionally focused on concrete work, including driveways, slabs, polished concrete, repairs, cutting, exposed aggregate, preparation and durability.
Report a content issue or correction
If you notice unclear wording, a broken link, outdated information or a content issue, send the details to enquiries@coreconcretegroup.com.au.