Start with a specific need

How to Find Useful Products in a Mulebuy Spreadsheet

The fastest route is usually simple: choose a product type, decide which detail matters most, and ignore rows that cannot answer that question.

In short

Begin with a category such as shoes, jackets, or bags. Add a practical detail only when you need it—for example, measurements, warehouse photos, material, or estimated weight. Open a few comparable results rather than dozens of unrelated items.

Choose the product before the platform

Write down what you actually want: “black jacket with chest measurement” is more useful than a broad request for popular finds. A clear product description also makes it easier to notice when a result is unrelated.

If you are only browsing, choose one category and set a time limit. Endless scrolling makes weak rows feel familiar without making them more useful.

When the source link matters

Yupoo

Often used as a visual catalog. Check whether the gallery leads to a current product page and whether the colours and details match.

Taobao or Weidian

Open the listing when you need the current variants, seller information, price, or product description. Compare the live page with the spreadsheet row.

1688

Read quantity, variant, and specification options carefully. The first price shown may not apply to the version you want.

Converted links

A converted address can make a source page easier to open in another service. It does not check the seller or product for you.

Use the unanswered question to narrow the results

For clothing, look for a size chart or the exact measurement you need. For shoes, prioritise size information and clear views of both sides, heel, toe, and sole. For bags, check dimensions, interior, straps, and closures. The category guide lists the details worth checking for each product type.

If the concern is appearance, look for warehouse or QC photos of the exact variant. If the concern is cost, check weight and packing assumptions. One precise question is easier to answer than a long string of loosely related words.

What a useful result looks like

  • The title describes the actual product rather than calling it “best.”
  • The destination still opens and matches the row.
  • The selected colour, size, or version is clear.
  • Photos show the details that matter for that category.
  • The price and weight can be compared with similar items.

Common dead ends

  • Opening dozens of tabs before choosing a category.
  • Assuming “QC” means approved rather than photographed.
  • Using a link converter when the real problem is missing measurements.
  • Trusting an old thumbnail after the destination has changed.
  • Saving a row because it appears in several lists.

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