How to Choose 1, 10, or 60 Minute Marketplace Checks
Not every marketplace search deserves the same check interval. A rare car model, urgent rental search, or local free-item pickup may justify a faster cadence. A broad furniture, tool, or collectibles watch can often run quietly in the background.
The goal is to spend capacity where timing actually changes your decision, while keeping broader research searches affordable and calm.
Use 60 minute checks for background awareness
A 60 minute check is a good fit when you are learning a market rather than trying to act on every listing quickly.
Use it for:
- broad price research
- furniture styles you may buy eventually
- collectible categories with many false positives
- used car market watching across several models
- tools or appliances where condition matters more than speed
These searches are useful because they create a review habit. You can see seller wording, compare prices, and decide which terms deserve a stricter search later.
For broad watches, route alerts to Email, Web Push, or Discord. That keeps them visible without interrupting your day.
Use 10 minute checks for active searches
A 10 minute check often fits the middle ground: you care about the search, but you do not need every possible match pushed to your phone immediately.
Use it for:
- a specific couch, desk, or chair within a local radius
- a used car model with a realistic budget
- power tools from one battery platform
- an iPhone, MacBook, camera, or console search with clear model terms
- rentals where the criteria are narrow enough to review quickly
At this level, the quality of your rules matters. Add include terms that describe the item, price filters that match your budget, and exclusions for repeated low-fit posts.
If the search still produces too much noise, keep the 10 minute interval but move the channel to Email or Discord until the filters improve.
Use 1 minute checks only for narrow, high-priority searches
A 1 minute check should be reserved for the searches where acting sooner may genuinely matter and the result feed is clean enough to review.
Examples:
- a specific vehicle model in your inspection area
- a rental that matches strict location and budget rules
- a high-demand local pickup item with clear terms
- a free-item or moving-sale search you are ready to act on
Do not use the fastest interval to compensate for a weak search. If the query is broad, faster checks can simply create faster noise. Tighten the search first, then use a faster interval when the matches are worth reviewing.
Reassign capacity as the search changes
Classifindr uses reusable units, so interval choices can change as your buying situation changes.
A simple weekly routine:
- Keep broad research searches at 60 minutes.
- Move active searches to 10 minutes once the terms are useful.
- Use 1 minute checks for narrow searches during an active buying window.
- Pause finished searches and reassign units to the next priority.
This makes capacity a planning tool rather than a fixed package. You can run a quiet watch for weeks, then shift units toward a short-term search when the decision becomes urgent.
Pair interval with channel
Interval and notification channel should work together.
- 60 minute checks fit Email, Web Push, or Discord.
- 10 minute checks fit Email, Discord, Telegram, or mobile push depending on urgency.
- 1 minute checks should usually go to mobile push or Telegram only when the search is narrow.
The best alert setup is the one you can actually keep reading. Faster is not always better. A clean search at the right interval is more useful than a loud search that trains you to ignore it.
Useful next steps:
- Review unit-based pricing.
- Open the notification channel planner.
- Browse alert pages by item.