Launched this week

Quvirl
Find trending dropshipping products with real signals
9 followers
Find trending dropshipping products with real signals
9 followers
Quvirl helps dropshippers discover trending product ideas using real market signals like Google Trends momentum, Amazon demand, supplier data, and product scores. It is built to make product research faster before manual validation and testing.







Curious how often the trend data refreshes, and does it factor in seasonality so a product isnt just flagged as hot because its holiday spike
@memetsanayi Great question. Quvirl’s product data is refreshed through a scheduled monthly update, including Google Trends, Amazon demand, supplier data, and the resulting Quvirl Score.
A product isn’t flagged as trending from one sudden spike alone. Quvirl combines recent trend momentum with Amazon demand and supplier signals to provide a broader view.
Full year-over-year seasonality detection is still being improved, so seasonal or holiday products should still be manually checked before testing.
How does the product scoring actually work behind the scenes, is it a weighted combo of those signals or something more proprietary?
@helinkrana2azq Yes for scoring it combines signals from Google, Amazon and supplier data.
How does Quvirl handle the noise when a product is just briefly spiking on Google Trends versus something with sustained demand, and does the scoring factor that in?
@ayekapszm5vk That's exactly the kind of problem Quvirl aims to solve. Quvirl doesn't score products based on a single Google Trends spike. The scoring considers recent trend momentum alongside Amazon demand and supplier signals, so products with more sustained demand generally score better than short-lived viral spikes. During our current maintenance period we're also refining the scoring model further, including better seasonality handling, to make those distinctions even more reliable.
Curious how fresh the Google Trends data is — are you pulling it daily or is there a delay before a product actually flags as trending?
Google Trends data is refreshed through our scheduled data pipeline. We’re currently refining the update frequency during maintenance, but the goal is to keep trend signals fresh while avoiding overreacting to short-term spikes.
Quvirl doesn’t rely on a single Google Trends spike — it combines momentum, Amazon demand, supplier signals, and the overall Quvirl Score to identify products with stronger potential.
We’re also working on improving seasonality detection so products that only spike around holidays or temporary events are easier to identify.
The Trends momentum score is actually useful here, it’s saved me a lot of time scrolling through random keyword lists. Wish the supplier data was a bit more fleshed out but overall solid for the validation stage.
@neclapzxa That's great 👏
Scanned the trend dashboard and the Google Trends momentum score saved me from guessing what was actually picking up. Solid starting point before doing the manual legwork.