Currently all the deals are categorised by
These categories and tags help other members to find the list of deals he/she is looking for.
Picking the right category is relatively trivial. If you don't think your deal fit into any of the pre-defined categories, you can always use “Other”. However correctly tagging your deal can sometimes be a daunting task. Moreover, every contributor on ChoiceCheapies has different ways of tagging their deals.
This document is aimed to be a guideline on how one should tag posted deals.
Here is a simple list of DOs and DON'Ts when you tag your deals. Those are “best practises” however there might not be an absolute correct way to tag a deal.
If the deal is a product, do tag its
DO NOT tag the shop that sell the product in your deal. We already have deals by domain therefore there is no need to tag the shop's name.
For example, there is no point tagging “DickSmith” in a DickSmith TV deal, unless the TV is of DickSmith's home brand (which is also called DickSmith).
The same applies to Apple or Dell – tag them because these are brands of product, but not because they are the store.
DO NOT use multiple tags that mean the same thing, which just bloats our database and adds complexity, which makes harder for other members to find deals. Please also limit the number of tags to less than 10 (although ideally, less than 5). Having too many ambiguous tags just make a deal look spammy.
For example, do not tag a deal both “Laptop” and “Notebook”, as these mean the same thing (in most cases). “Laptop” is the canonical way to tag the laptop computers on ChoiceCheapies.
DO NOT use adjectives just as 'cheap', 'free', 'discounted', 'beautiful', 'bargain' as tags. Tags are meant to categorise the deal or product, and not describe. Tags such as these add no value to the deal and will only make the deal look more spammy to users.
Use singular rather than plural nouns when you tag, unless the plural form is commonly used. This also reduces the number of tags needed for a deal.
For example, tag “Laptop” rather than “Laptops”. “DVD” rather than “DVDs”. However, tag “Shoes” and “Eyeglasses”.
Here some of the specific guidelines on the products.
Category guideline: Any components, accessories or peripherals that are typically attached to a computer should be categorised under computing.
Examples: Storage drives (both internal and external), gaming headsets, gaming mice, keyboards, desktop computer parts such as Video cards, uninterruptible power supplies, printers and other USB-attached peripherals such as USB hubs, Bluetooth, Wi-Fi adapters etc.
Media players and single board computers that run a programmable operating system (e.g Linux, Android) should also be categorised as a computer.
Category guideline
The following should be categorised under Entertainment:
Category Guideline
Many electronics and AV equipment are commonly mistakenly tagged as Entertainment. These include speakers, headphones, radios, record players, televisions, surround sound systems and media players. Please categorise those as Electronics instead.
LCD monitors for computers are categorised as computing.
Category Guideline
Console accessories should be categorised as gaming. These include game controllers, virtual reality headsets, joysticks and racing wheels.
Computer gaming accessories should be categorised as computing. These include gaming keyboards & mice, mousepads, headsets & microphones.
Tagging Guideline
If possible, please tag posted games with
Category Guideline
Both Mobile phones and mobile phone services (plans, SIMs, recharge vouchers) should be categorised under “mobile”
Tagging Guideline