Here are my notability standards. They are not meant to overrule notability guidelines but instead provide insight into the meanings of them.
Criterion 1
editMy first criterion is looking at the article itself. If it is overtly promotional then I will !vote for speedy deletion under criterion G11. If it does not provide a credible claim of importance or significance, broadly construed, then I will !vote for speedy deletion under criterion A7, etcetera.
Criterion 2
editMy second criterion is doing a Google search on the subject. If it returns any results then I will move on to Criterion 3. If it fails to return any results, then I will try another less restrictive search. If that fails to return any results then I will probably rethink and propose for A7 or G3.
Criterion 3
editMy third criterion is looking at the subject-specific guidelines which the article falls under.
Criterion 4
editMy fourth criterion is doing a Google News search. If it returns results specifically about that person then I will move on to C5.
Criterion 5
editCriterion 6
editMultiple sources.
Criterion 7
editCriterion 8
editConsideration to whether the sources found are almost duplicates.
Criterion 9
editWP:NOT considerations.
Criterion 10
editEditorial discretion (modern bios, stubs with a clear parent article, and tech articles only, probably).