Tam Farms · Article 15
Who qualifies as an expert in the Tam Farms system?
The title "expert" in Tam Farms is not based on self-declaration. It is based on evidence, a clear scope, and verifiable ethics rules.
In Tam Farms, "expert" is a conditional title. No one is called an expert simply because they declare themselves so. This title is tied to a specific set of standards — from profile and evidence of expertise to ethics rules and a suspension/revocation mechanism.
1. Profile and experience
An expert must have a clear profile: education, real-world experience, area of expertise. Experience must be continuous and verifiable — not just a title on a business card.
2. Evidence of expertise
An expert must provide evidence of expertise: completed projects, published products, research, academic work, or verifiable work outcomes. Evidence is kept on file and may be requested again during periodic audits.
3. Scope of guidance
Each expert is recognized within a specific scope. A technology expert is not automatically recognized as an agriculture expert. The scope of guidance is clearly stated and must not be exceeded when accompanying participants.
4. Ethics
Experts must comply with ethics rules: honesty about capabilities, no abuse of position, no creation of unhealthy dependency, respect for the participant's right to refuse.
5. Consent
Before beginning guidance, the expert and participant must clearly agree on: goals, scope, methods, duration. Any changes must be recorded in writing or in traceable messages.
6. Confidentiality
Experts must keep participants' personal information confidential: health status, finances, family, personal projects. Information is only shared with clear consent or a legal requirement.
7. Limits on medical and financial claims
Experts in Tam Farms must not make medical claims, diagnoses, or treatment recommendations. Must not provide personal financial advice, investment recommendations, or income guarantees. If a participant needs these services, the expert refers them to the appropriate expertise outside the system.
8. Feedback from participants
After each program, participants provide feedback about the expert. Feedback is stored and used in periodic evaluations. Continuously negative feedback is grounds for reviewing the revocation of the title.
9. Suspension and revocation of title
An expert may be suspended or have their title revoked if: they violate ethics, exceed the scope of guidance, make medical/financial claims against the rules, or receive serious negative feedback. The decision is recorded in the audit trail.
An expert is not someone who knows everything. An expert is someone who knows their limits clearly and guides within that scope.
Content is orientational and introduces the model. Not medical, psychological, legal, or investment advice. No guarantee of employment, income, housing, or personal outcomes.
See also: All articles · Register for an experience
Language: Tiếng Việt