Joyagoo spreadsheet guide · 2026

Joyagoo Spreadsheet Guide for Finds, Search and Categories

A careful starting point for using Joyagoo sheets, product links and category shortcuts without treating a spreadsheet as live inventory or verification.

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What a Joyagoo spreadsheet is useful for

A Joyagoo spreadsheet is a saved list of product references, categories or marketplace links. Its value is simple: it gives you a more organised starting point than opening unrelated links one by one. It is still a reference list, not live stock or proof that every row is current.

How to check whether a sheet is current

A date in the title is only a starting clue. Open several rows and check whether the destination still matches, obvious duplicates were removed and useful photos, sizes and source details are present. A current sheet should make recent checks visible instead of relying on words such as “best” or “updated.”

What a useful row should contain

A useful spreadsheet row should answer enough questions to justify opening it. At minimum, look for a clear category, a descriptive item name, a reachable destination, an indication of when the row was checked and one or two pieces of decision evidence such as dimensions, inspection images or weight context. A row made only of a catchy label and a price creates more work than it removes.

Evidence to record

Note the final domain, the option you inspected, the measurement method and the date you checked it. These small details make a shortlist auditable later.

Reasons to remove a row

Delete duplicates, unexplained redirects, missing items and entries whose main image or option no longer matches. A shorter current list is more useful than a large stale one.

Individual finds and full sheets solve different jobs

An individual find is a candidate you can inspect now. A spreadsheet groups many candidates so you can compare them. In both cases, ask what makes the item current and useful instead of relying on labels such as “new” or “best.”

Use the sheet for discovery, then verify the row

A sheet can organise your options, but the live destination decides whether the item still matches. On a phone, begin with a category and open only a few rows at a time; this is easier to manage than moving around a very wide sheet.

Use search and product-finder tools as a starting point

A search box or product finder can surface more options, but it does not make those options current or suitable. The form below opens Findsindex; check the destination, photos and selected option before saving anything.

Opens a separate Findsindex results page.

Start with one category

Categories help narrow a broad list before you compare photos, size and shipping sensitivity. Start with shoes, hoodies, shirts, jackets, pants, bags, accessories or electronics rather than mixing every product type into one shortlist.

A repeatable ten-minute review

Choose one category and open no more than five plausible rows. Remove destinations that are unavailable or clearly mismatched. For the remaining options, compare the same fields in the same order: visible item, selected variation, dimensions, inspection coverage, item price and likely parcel impact. Write one sentence explaining why each survivor is worth a second look. If you cannot state the reason without using words such as “best,” “must-have” or “popular,” the evidence is probably still too weak.

This workflow keeps discovery separate from the later purchasing decision. A spreadsheet can organize research, but it cannot show account-specific availability, calculate a final parcel quote or guarantee what a third party will deliver. Re-check those details at the relevant destination when you are ready to continue.

Links are clues, not approval

Whatever label appears beside a link, confirm the final destination, visible item, selected option and current details. A saved link can remain in a sheet long after its destination has changed.

Continue with your next question

Choose the missing evidence

Read the Joyagoo links and source guide, the QC and sizing guide, or the shipping and safety answers.