Contact
We’re a small, independent team focused entirely on Android coverage. If you need to reach us, you’re in the right place. Different types of inquiries go to different addresses, and this page explains which is which so your message gets to the right person without unnecessary delays.
General Readers
For questions about something you read on the site, feedback on our coverage, or a topic you think we should be covering, email editor@androidbeep.com.
We read everything that comes in. We don’t promise a personal reply to every piece of feedback, but reader mail genuinely shapes what we cover and how. If five readers in the same week write in asking why we haven’t reviewed a particular device, that registers. If several people point out that a buying guide is missing a category of phone they care about, we notice.
For questions like “Which Android phone should I buy given my specific situation?” the buying guides on the site will give you a more useful answer than we can over email. Those guides are written specifically to help people work through that decision, and they cover the context and tradeoffs in a way that a quick email exchange can’t. The comments section on individual articles is also a valuable place to ask specific questions, and we monitor those regularly.
Technical support for Android devices is outside what we can help with. For device issues, Google and Samsung both run dedicated support channels with staff who can work through problems directly with you.
Corrections and Factual Errors
If something we published is factually wrong, email editor@androidbeep.com with the article URL and a plain description of the error. If you have a source that supports the correction, include it. A manufacturer spec sheet, an official press release, documentation from the developer. That kind of evidence speeds up the review process considerably.
We investigate every correction request and respond within two business days. If the error is confirmed, we correct the article, add a dated correction notice at the top, and log the change on our Corrections page. If we investigate and disagree with the reported error, we’ll explain our reasoning.
One clarification: the corrections process is for verifiable factual errors, not for disagreements with review verdicts or editorial opinions. If you think we got a conclusion wrong, that’s a fair conversation to have, but it goes through the general editorial address rather than the corrections channel.
News Tips
If you have information about an unreleased Android device, a software issue affecting a broad group of users, something happening inside a manufacturer or carrier, or any other story you think we should know about, email tips@androidbeep.com.
Tips can be anonymous. You don’t have to identify yourself, and we treat source confidentiality seriously. If your tip involves documents or screenshots, attach them. If the material is sensitive and you’d prefer a more secure method of sharing it, say so in the first message, and we’ll work out an alternative.
We can’t promise that every tip leads to a published story. Some information can’t be verified, some falls outside the scope of what we cover, and sometimes a story is already in progress elsewhere by the time a tip arrives. But every tip gets read, and if something you send leads to coverage, we’ll let you know.
PR and Communications Professionals
For product review requests and press materials, email reviews@androidbeep.com. Include the product name, a short description, the release timeline, and whether a review unit is available to send.
A few things to be clear about before you reach out.
We can’t guarantee a review. Whether we cover a product depends on its relevance to the AndroidBeep audience and whether we have the capacity to test it the right way. If we can’t commit to a review, we’ll tell you directly rather than leaving you waiting.
We can’t guarantee a positive review. Every product we test goes through the same evaluation process regardless of who makes it or what kind of commercial relationship we have with the manufacturer. If something performs well, the review says so. If it has real problems, the review says that too.
Editorial coverage and advertising are separate operations with no connection to each other. Spending on advertising doesn’t influence what we write, and that works in both directions. A manufacturer with no advertising relationship can receive strong coverage. A manufacturer that does advertise with us can receive a critical review. The two sides don’t communicate about specific coverage decisions.
We don’t charge for reviews and don’t accept payment for editorial coverage in any form.
Advertisers
For display advertising, newsletter sponsorships, or sponsored content, email advertise@androidbeep.com with a brief description of what you’re promoting and your timeline.
The Advertised page covers our offerings and policies in detail, including what we offer and what we don’t. Reading that page first will tell you whether we’re the right fit before either side spends time on a back-and-forth. If you’ve already read it and want to talk specifics, the email address above is where to start. We respond to advertising inquiries within two business days.
Contributing Writers
AndroidBeep is staffed by a small core team, and we occasionally work with freelance contributors who know Android well and write clearly about it. If you’re interested in contributing, email editor@androidbeep.com with a short introduction, two or three links to published work, and a brief note on what you’d want to cover.
We’re not looking for generalist tech writers who cover everything. We’re looking for people with a specific focus on Android who can write a camera comparison, a long-term review, or a practical how-to without being hand-held through it. If that’s you, we’d like to hear from you.
Response Times
Two business days is our standard across all channels. Correction requests are the highest priority and consistently land within that window. PR and advertising inquiries sometimes run slightly longer during busy periods, but nothing goes unanswered.
If you sent a message more than four business days ago and haven’t heard back, follow up. Emails occasionally land in the wrong folder, and a short follow-up is a reasonable way to check.