Contact
Draft Day Authority is a reference site covering fantasy sports draft strategy, tools, formats, and preparation across all major fantasy platforms and sport types. This page covers how to reach the editorial team, what geographic scope the site serves, what to include when sending a message, and how long a response typically takes. Getting the right information into a message upfront saves a round-trip — which matters when draft day has a way of arriving faster than anyone expects.
How to reach this office
The primary contact method for Draft Day Authority is email. The editorial inbox handles all incoming correspondence, including factual corrections, topic suggestions, partnership inquiries, and general questions about the site's content.
Correspondence submitted through the site's contact form routes to the same editorial inbox as direct email. There is no tiered support system here — no ticket queues, no automated deflection loops, no chatbot that confidently misunderstands the question. A person reads the messages.
For time-sensitive factual corrections — a strategy page that references an outdated scoring format, or a platform feature that has since changed — marking the subject line with "Correction:" helps the editorial team prioritize appropriately.
Service area covered
Draft Day Authority operates with national scope across the United States. The content covers fantasy sports draft strategy and preparation as practiced across all 50 states, addressing formats, platforms, and rules structures that are in common use nationally.
The site does not currently maintain region-specific editorial desks. Content on draft day formats, ADP explained, positional scarcity, and related topics is written to apply broadly across the fantasy sports landscape rather than to any single state's platform regulations or local league customs.
International inquiries are welcome. Much of the strategic content — particularly around auction draft strategy, dynasty draft strategy, and value-based drafting — applies wherever the major US-based fantasy platforms operate, which includes Canada and parts of Europe. Responses to international messages may note where US-specific platform features create limitations in the advice.
What to include in your message
The difference between a message that gets a useful response and one that stalls in back-and-forth is usually specificity. A well-structured message takes 90 seconds to write and saves 3 exchanges.
For factual corrections or content feedback, include:
For topic or content suggestions, include:
- Which existing pages, if any, come closest to covering it (the glossary of draft day terms and draft day FAQ are good reference points)
- Any specific platform, sport, or format the suggestion is tied to — a fantasy baseball draft day question has different editorial considerations than a daily fantasy sports draft day question
For partnership or licensing inquiries, include the organization name, the nature of the inquiry, and a contact name. Vague partnership messages tend to sit unanswered not out of indifference but out of genuine confusion about what response would be useful.
One thing that does not need to be included: lengthy apologies for asking. The site exists to be useful, and questions are a reasonable part of that.
Response expectations
Editorial response times depend on the nature of the inquiry.
Factual corrections receive priority handling. When a content error is clearly documented — a wrong platform feature description, an outdated scoring default, a misattributed rule — the editorial team aims to review within 3 to 5 business days and update the affected page if the correction is verified.
General content questions and topic suggestions typically receive a response within 7 to 10 business days. The response may be brief — an acknowledgment that the suggestion has been logged, or a note that the topic is already in development — rather than a detailed exchange.
Partnership and licensing inquiries are reviewed on a less predictable schedule, as they involve coordination beyond the editorial team. Expect an initial response within 10 business days confirming receipt; substantive follow-up may take longer.
A note on draft season timing: inquiry volume increases noticeably in the 6-week window before the NFL season's fantasy draft peak, typically late July through early September. Response times during that stretch may run toward the longer end of each range. The commissioner draft day checklist and mock draft guide pages tend to generate the highest volume of questions during that window — checking those pages first often answers the question before the message needs to be sent.
Messages that arrive without a clear subject or without enough context to identify what kind of response would be useful may receive a short clarifying reply rather than a full answer. That is not a brush-off; it is the fastest path to actually being helpful.
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