FAQ for Reverse Shopping and Proxy-Buying Research
These answers are written for users who want to treat Hacoo VIP as a research entrance, not a checkout shortcut. The goal is to help you understand what each card does, what to verify, and when to stop before a proxy-buying decision.
1. Is Hacoo VIP an official Hacoo website?
No. Hacoo VIP is an independent shopping discovery and education site. It is not the official Hacoo app website, does not represent Hacoo, and does not claim an official partnership.
2. Why does the site reference Hacoo at all?
Hacooâs public site positions the brand around sharing, discovering and inspiring lifestyle content. Hacoo VIP uses that discovery idea to build an external research workflow, but it stays independent and sends users to main-site product pages or categories.
3. Does Hacoo VIP sell products?
No. It does not manufacture, sell, collect payment, store goods, arrange shipping or provide after-sales service. It only provides navigation, education, product-detail entrances and category links.
4. What is reverse shopping?
Reverse shopping means starting from a clueâusually a product cover image, a category card or a trendâthen working backward through product details, image consistency, category fit, route clarity and QC needs before deciding whether the item deserves attention.
5. Why are trending cards linked to product pages?
A user who clicks a product image expects a specific product page, not a broad category. That is why Hacoo VIPâs trending cards are designed to open matching product-detail pages where the user can inspect the item more carefully.
6. Why are category cards linked to category pages?
Category cards serve a different intent. If someone clicks âShoes,â âJacketsâ or âT-Shirts,â they likely want to browse a collection. Keeping category links separate from product links makes the site easier to use and cleaner for SEO.
7. What should I check before continuing to a proxy-buying flow?
Check the product title, cover image, detail photos, material cues, sizing notes, color consistency and any available QC-related information. If the page lacks detail or the image does not match the title, slow down or stop.
8. What Hacoo facts influenced this FAQ?
Hacooâs public pages emphasize real community inspiration, honest flaws, trust and safety, deceptive-content enforcement, intellectual-property protection and creator tracking links. Those signals support a cautious, transparency-first shopping research workflow.
9. Should I trust a spreadsheet link immediately?
No. A spreadsheet link is only a lead. Treat it as a starting point for research, not as proof of quality, authenticity, safe logistics or seller reliability. Verification still belongs to the shopper.
10. When should I avoid a product or link?
Avoid it when the image, title and destination do not match; when links feel misleading; when detail photos are missing; when claims sound exaggerated; or when the page asks you to trust it without evidence.