Product-type notes

Joyabuy Spreadsheet Categories

The best first filter is often the simplest one: decide what kind of item you are evaluating, then ask for the evidence that category needs.

Why categories matter

Different products fail in different ways. A shoe row can look complete while hiding the insole length. A jacket can have many photos but no measurement table. An accessory can be shown clearly yet omit the dimension or compatibility that determines whether it is useful.

Category-first browsing gives every row a shared standard. It also prevents a visually impressive item in one section from distorting the comparison in another.

Category guide and external routes

Shoes

General footwear and casual shoe searches.

Check side profiles, toe, heel, sole, size label, insole length, and boxed bulk.Open shoes on Findsindex โ†—

Bags

Carry pieces, small bags, and structured storage.

Check dimensions, interior, closure, strap range, hardware, and scale.Open bags on Findsindex โ†—

Hoodies

Pullovers, zip layers, and relaxed tops.

Check garment width and length, fabric surface, hood, cuffs, seams, and weight.Open hoodies on Findsindex โ†—

Shirts

Buttoned shirts, simple tops, and related clothing.

Check garment measurements, collar, cuffs, seams, front and back, and fabric.Open shirts on Findsindex โ†—

Pants

Trousers and other bottom-layer searches.

Check waist, rise, inseam, thigh, hem, front and back, and fabric stretch.Open pants on Findsindex โ†—

Watches

Wristwear where dimensions and close detail matter.

Check case and strap dimensions, dial, clasp, side profile, and stated functions.Open watches on Findsindex โ†—

Jewelry

Small pieces that need scale and fastening detail.

Check dimensions, material description, clasp, surface finish, and close views.Open jewelry on Findsindex โ†—

Electronics

Useful only when model and compatibility are explicit.

Check exact model, ports, plug or voltage, included pieces, condition, and support limits.Open electronics on Findsindex โ†—

All routes above use Findsindex global category pages and open in a new tab.

Which category should you start with?

Start with the item you are genuinely prepared to compare today. If you already know the product type, choose it directly. If the row could fit two sections, use the broader parent category and write down the missing detail before opening links.

If you are browsing with no product in mind, choose one category that has an easy pass-or-fail requirement. For example, look only at jackets with visible measurements or bags with an interior view. A firm requirement prevents endless scrolling.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Opening one promising row from many unrelated categories.
  • Applying the same photo checklist to every product type.
  • Saving a row because the label is familiar while the evidence is thin.
  • Using product price alone when parcel bulk could change the decision.
  • Assuming a category link proves anything about the individual listing.
  • Inventing a narrow route when a confirmed parent category already works.

Checklist before opening an external page

  1. Can you name the category in one phrase?
  2. Do you know which two or three details matter most?
  3. Have you chosen at least one nearby row for comparison?
  4. Can you explain what the external page needs to confirm?
  5. Will you close the page if it does not answer that question?

If the answer is yes, use the relevant global category above. If not, visit the spreadsheet checklist or read the buyer safety notes first.