What this handbook tries to solve
- How to judge when a marketplace link is clean enough to move into Oopbuy
- Which inspection requests actually change the keep, cut, or wait decision
- How storage and parcel splitting alter cost, speed, and shipping risk
Why the guide is built around the Oopbuy stage
Product discovery can happen on Taobao, 1688, Weidian, Yupoo, or private seller lists. The expensive mistakes usually happen later:
confirming the option text, interpreting warehouse photos, deciding what should stay in storage, and choosing how the parcel leaves China.
That is the stage this site focuses on.
Who gets the most value from it
Buyers who already have links and want fewer avoidable mistakes, plus first-timers who need a calmer explanation of what happens between
submission, inspection, storage, and dispatch.
How pages get rewritten
We prioritize pages that remove confusion around source links, inspection expectations, parcel splitting, and line selection. If buyer
behaviour changes or a common assumption becomes misleading, we rewrite the whole section instead of stacking short patches on top of stale
copy.
What this site does not do
We do not place orders, access your Oopbuy account, promise shipping outcomes, or process refunds. Official account questions still belong in
the Oopbuy dashboard or support channels, not in this editorial site.
Editorial standard
The writing is meant to be practical, not promotional. If a workflow only helps in narrow cases, we say so. If a shortcut creates risk on a
first parcel, we would rather slow the reader down than pretend every source link, warehouse intake, and shipping line behaves the same.