Independent guide · category first

Orientdig Spreadsheet Guide for Cleaner Finds

Search a product name or source link, compare the result with similar finds, and keep only the rows that give you enough detail to decide.

TaobaoWeidian1688Yupoo terms

Orientdig Sheet is an independent browsing guide for Orientdig spreadsheet users. It does not sell products, process orders, handle shipping, verify sellers, or represent Orientdig or Findsindex.

Search and orange buttons open Findsindex in a new tab.

Start with thisA useful Orientdig spreadsheet moves you from a broad list of links to a smaller shortlist. Start with the category, check photos, sizing, price context and shipping weight, then continue only with rows that still make sense.

A cleaner starting point

Why begin with the category?

A mixed sheet can make unrelated rows look equally promising. Once you separate footwear from bags or clothing, the details become comparable: size information means something, photo angles repeat, and shipping weight has context.

Choose one product type

Decide what you are actually comparing before opening a run of links.

Compare like with like

Open a small group of similar finds and look for consistent photo and measurement evidence.

Save with a reason

Keep a row only when you can state what makes it clearer or more useful than the alternatives.

Shortlist logic

What makes a row worth saving?

  • The category and source link describe the same type of item.
  • Photos show details that matter, not only a polished front image.
  • Sizing, measurements or fit notes appear where needed.
  • Price is considered beside comparable finds, not in isolation.
  • Likely shipping weight does not erase the apparent value.
  • The source clue is relevant and the row has a reason beyond hype.
Small shortlist rule

Fewer rows, better questions

Ten vague bookmarks are less useful than three rows with clear photos, measurements and a source you understand. The spreadsheet is an index, not evidence by itself.

Score a row with the seven-point checklist

Practical reading

Turn spreadsheet browsing into a decision

Use these guides when a row looks promising but you still need to know whether it is distinct, visually supported or connected to the right source.

01

Compare rows without duplicate noise

Build a three-row table, check freshness and keep a reason for every saved option.

Read the comparison method7 minute practical guide
02

Read QC photos by category

Match photo coverage to shoes, apparel, bags, accessories or electronics.

Open the QC photo guide8 minute visual checklist
03

Understand the original source

Keep raw and converted links clear across Taobao, Weidian, 1688 and Yupoo.

Read the source-link guide7 minute link guide

Search ideas

Search for the detail you still need

If you know the product type, name it plainly. Paste the original source link when you have one. Add a practical detail—measurements, interior photos, sole views or packed weight—only when that is the question holding up your decision.

Keep the query short enough to understand at a glance. If the results mix several product types, return to the category page instead of adding a long string of unrelated terms.

Know the category? Keep the next step simple.

Open the matching Findsindex category when the product type is clear. If the row is still vague, use the checklist first and keep the shortlist small.