Choose what you want to compare

Hoobuy Spreadsheet Categories

Shoes, jackets and electronics need different checks. Pick the item type first so every product on your shortlist can be judged on the same details.

Open one category and choose three to five products. Compare the photos, measurements and packed weight that matter for that item, then remove any row that leaves the main question unanswered.

Twelve product groups

What to look for in each category

External links open in a new tab, so you can keep these notes beside the product page.

Bags

Dimensions and interior space matter more than a front photo. Check the closure, hardware, lining, base and straps.

Browse bags on Findsindex ↗

Hoodies

Use chest, length and sleeve measurements instead of the size letter alone. Check the hood, cuffs, hem and fabric close up.

Browse hoodies on Findsindex ↗

Shirts & T-shirts

Compare garment width and length with a shirt you own. Then inspect the collar, fabric and graphic placement.

Browse tops on Findsindex ↗

These links open Findsindex’s global product categories directly. Hoo Buy does not control their content or verify individual listings.

Choose by uncertainty

Which category should you start with?

If you are deciding between several product types, choose the one whose unknowns you can investigate most clearly today.

Fit is the main risk

Start with hoodies, shirts, jackets or pants only when the row includes garment measurements you can compare with something you own.

Construction is the main risk

Start with shoes, sneakers, bags or accessories when photos show enough angles and close details to compare the build.

Specification is the main risk

For watches or jewelry, remove rows that rely on a familiar-looking image while hiding dimensions, mechanism, finish or fastening.

Mistakes that make category browsing noisy

  • Opening one row from every category. You lose a fair comparison set and end up judging each item on a different standard.
  • Using popularity as evidence. A widely shared label does not replace measurements, useful photos or a relevant source page.
  • Mixing item price with total value. Heavy footwear or outerwear may change the decision once packing and shipping are considered.
  • Treating all photos alike. A clean front image may still hide the sole, closure, lining or measurement that matters.
  • Saving “maybe” rows. If you cannot state the unresolved question, the shortlist becomes another messy spreadsheet.

Checklist before opening an external page

  • I chose one category and know what I am comparing.
  • The row title and image describe the same product type.
  • I know which photo, size or specification detail I need next.
  • I will compare the row with at least one relevant alternative.
  • I understand that the external page can change after this guide is published.

Carry the same standard into every category

The product-specific checks change; the discipline does not. Keep only rows with useful evidence and a reason to continue.