Comparable evidence
Like sits beside like
A jacket row should compete with other jackets, not with a low-priced accessory that makes its price look misleading.
Independent ParcelUp spreadsheet guide
Search by product name, category, source phrase, or paste an item URL to browse matching Findsindex products.
Category-first browsing
ParcelUp is an independent browsing guide for ParcelUp spreadsheet users. It does not sell products, process orders, handle shipping, verify sellers, or represent ParcelUp or Findsindex.
Search results open on Findsindex in a new tab.
Findsindex product directory
Jump from ParcelUp directly to the matching Findsindex product directory.
Not sure where to begin? Read the product-specific checks before opening a directory.
Open the category guideA ParcelUp spreadsheet is useful when it helps you move 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.
Cut the noise first
Mixed ParcelUp spreadsheets encourage random clicking. A category gives every row the same job, so details such as measurements, photo angles and weight become easier to compare.
Comparable evidence
A jacket row should compete with other jackets, not with a low-priced accessory that makes its price look misleading.
Useful questions
Footwear calls for sole, profile and sizing views. Bags need dimensions, closure details and inside photos. One generic QC check is not enough.
A clean stopping point
Keep a small set of plausible candidates, write down why each survived, and remove rows that add no new evidence.
Choose the format for the job
A ParcelUp spreadsheet is useful for broad discovery. A searchable directory is better once you know what you want to compare. The strongest workflow uses both without treating either one as proof.
Use a spreadsheet when
A sheet is good for scanning mixed ideas, noticing unfamiliar categories and saving rough leads. Keep the first pass loose, but record why a row caught your attention.
Use Findsindex when
A directory is more practical when you need a category, one clear product question or mobile-friendly results. It helps you leave the giant-sheet mindset behind.
A simple handoff: discover in the sheet, remove vague rows with the checklist, then search Findsindex only for the category or evidence that survived.
A repeatable three-step pass
Decide whether today’s job is footwear, a layer, a bag or a smaller accessory. This sets the right evidence standard.
Place two or three relevant rows side by side. Look for differences in photos, measurements, source clarity and expected weight.
“Looks popular” is not a reason. “Has the size chart and angles I need” is. If you cannot explain the save, remove it.
The shortlist test
A promising row reduces uncertainty. It does not need to prove everything, but it should give you enough context to ask the next sensible question.
Ask one clear question
A year may help you find a newer-looking sheet, while Yupoo, Taobao, Weidian or 1688 describe different sources. Add photos, sizing or shipping only when that is the question you need answered.
Start with a general spreadsheet, sheet, links or finds request when you are still mapping what exists.
Read the main guide →A raw link or original link can reveal where a listing began. It does not verify the seller, item or current page.
Explore source searches →Look for useful photos, a weight estimate or a size chart after a row survives the first comparison.
Use the seven-point check →Keep the guide close
Open the matching Findsindex page. If you are still unsure, read the checklist first and keep the shortlist small.