
Vim Python IDE
Storelister
AutoDS
Spocket
Pipiads
CJdropshipping
Zendrop
NicheFind AI
Adspy
Storelister indexes Shopify stores daily and categorizes every product into 225+ niches. The result is a living database where you can open any e-commerce category and see what sellers in that space are actually carrying. Beauty, tech, home, fitness, pet, digital goods, all of it, organized and searchable.
What separates it from a static product list is the pace. Stores enter the database the day they launch. Their full catalogs come with them. So a niche you checked last Tuesday looks different today, because new sellers showed up with new products since then.
There are two interfaces. The directory is for when you know what niche you're after and want to search with intent. Finder is for when you don't. It's a visual swipe feed, one product at a time, save or skip. Most users bounce between both depending on the day.
Sellers at every stage get something out of it. If you haven't picked a niche yet, browse until one clicks. If you've been in a niche for a year, use it to see what's changed around you.
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Storelister's answer:
StoreLister tracks Shopify stores the day they launch and organizes their full product catalogs into 225+ niche categories using AI. Most research tools pull from ads or social media. StoreLister pulls from actual store shelves. That means you're seeing what sellers are betting their own money on, not what's going viral. The database updates daily, and Finder adds a swipe-based discovery layer that no other product research tool offers.
Storelister's answer:
The data comes directly from live Shopify stores. Products are organized by niche so you can research any category in seconds instead of visiting stores one by one. Finder gives you a way to discover products you'd never think to search for, including digital products. And there are no feature tiers. Every subscriber gets full access to everything, every niche, every filter, every tool.
Storelister's answer:
Dropshippers and Shopify store owners doing product research. That includes people just starting out who need to find their first niche, and experienced sellers who want to stay current on what's moving in their market. E-commerce consultants and agencies also use it to research categories on behalf of clients.