By: William Jones
In a digital world flooded with misinformation, noise, and endless clickbait, Roman Creed saw a growing problem — people were becoming increasingly skeptical about the trustworthiness of the internet itself. Out of that concern came eFAQ.com, an emerging online platform built on one clear idea: truth should be easier to find.
“Information should empower, not confuse,” Creed says. “We built eFAQ because people deserve access to answers that are generally reliable, without jumping from one unreliable site to another.”
eFAQ.com goes beyond being another search tool. It is a full-scale information hub that combines verified public data, advanced analytics, and cognitive technology into one streamlined experience. Whether it is checking a vehicle’s history, researching property ownership, running a people search, or testing your memory and IQ, eFAQ offers fast and typically reliable results designed to simplify how people access knowledge.
Creed’s goal is simple — to bring truth and transparency back into the internet.
Breaking into the information industry was no small feat. The space was already filled with questionable data sources, cluttered websites, and platforms that valued advertising revenue more than accuracy.
“Building a business is one thing,” Creed says. “Building one person’s trust is another. Every feature, every database, every decision we made had to reflect integrity.”
While many competitors raced to capture users through aggressive marketing, eFAQ took the opposite approach. “We are not chasing users,” Creed says. “We are working to earn them. Every choice we make is about improving the user’s experience. If it does not serve that purpose, we avoid it.”
That steady commitment has paid off. With strong user growth, an average rating generally above four stars, and a satisfaction focus, eFAQ has quietly built a reputation for reliability in a market where trust can be rare.
The spark for eFAQ came from Creed’s own frustration. “The internet had become fragmented,” he recalls. “You would visit five or six different sites just to find one answer, and most of what you found was buried under ads or unreliable information. We wanted to improve that.”
For Creed, the mission goes beyond building a company. It is about giving people control over the information they rely on. “Access to accurate information should not be a privilege,” he says.“It is a right. Everyone deserves to make informed choices without being misled.”
Creed often speaks about the mindset behind eFAQ’s creation, calling it the foundation of any successful venture. “You can have funding, talent, and vision, but if your mindset is weak, none of it will matter,” he says. “You have to stay connected to your purpose, especially when progress feels slow.”
He describes the early days of eFAQ as filled with long nights and uncertainty, but also with clarity about why they started. “Our purpose never changed — to make information better and more accessible for everyone.”
He also views fear as part of the process. “If you are not scared, you are not growing,” he says. “Fear means you are pushing boundaries. The goal is not to avoid it but to move through it.”
For Creed, success is not about profit margins or recognition. It is about impact. “Success is when someone uses eFAQ and finds real clarity,” he says. “When we make someone’s life easier or help them make a better decision, that is the real reward.”
He also connects success to freedom, not financial freedom alone, but the freedom to innovate. “Financial freedom gives us creative freedom,” he explains. “It means we can take our time and build eFAQ the right way, not the fastest way.”
eFAQ continues to evolve, with major projects underway. The team is expanding its global property and vehicle databases, improving people search tools, and developing a new collection of interactive brain and memory training programs.
“Our long-term goal is to make eFAQ the most trusted destination for reliable information,” Creed says. “Whether someone is researching a home, checking a vehicle, or exploring self-improvement tools, we want them to come to eFAQ and feel confident that what they find is typically accurate.”
To Creed, eFAQ is more than a product. It is a movement. In an era where speed often outweighs accuracy, the company is taking a stand for clarity and accountability.
“We are building something that lasts,” he says. “Something that makes people smarter, safer, and more confident with the information they use every day.”
Thousands of users now rely on eFAQ for everything from vehicle reports and property data to IQ and personality assessments. With its clean interface and focus on trust, the platform is quietly redefining how people interact with data.
Creed’s philosophy remains grounded. “Technology should make life simpler, not more complicated,” he says. “Our mission is to bring back trust in an online world that has become more concerned with speed than truth.”
As eFAQ grows, Creed stays focused on the same principle that started it all — helping people find clarity. “We are here to bring truth back to the internet,” he says. “One search at a time.”











