Module 1.3 —

Publish Your First Listing

Create Your Listing

Create Your Listing

Video + Article

2 minutes

Lesson 1 of

3

Modules 1.3 - Progress

Publish Your First Listing

·

3 Lessons

1

2 minutes

·

Video + Article

2

2 minutes

·

Video + Article

3

2 minutes

·

Video + Article

Modules 1.3 - Progress

Publish Your First Listing

·

3 Lessons

1

2 minutes

·

Video + Article

2

2 minutes

·

Video + Article

3

2 minutes

·

Video + Article

From your dashboard, navigate to Products in the left sidebar. Click Create.

The product creation form opens as a focused modal with three tabs: General, Organise, and Variants. You need to complete all three before the listing can be saved.

Tab 1 — General

This tab is what buyers read when they land on your listing. It is also what Driwego's search uses to find you. Spend time here.

Title

The name of what you are selling. Be specific. 'Brake pad set' is worse than 'Front brake pad set for Proton Saga 2016–2022'. The buyer searching for the second phrase is ready to buy. The buyer reading the first phrase still has a question.

Subtitle

Optional. Use it for a secondary descriptor — a brand name, a part number, a compatibility note that does not fit in the title. Not all listings need this. Leave it blank if you have nothing meaningful to add.

Description

This is your space to tell the buyer what they need to know before committing. Cover: what the part is for, what vehicles it fits, what condition it is in, what is included in the package. Write it the way you would explain it to a customer standing in front of you. No promotional language. No caps. No 'BEST PRICE GUARANTEED'. Just the information.

A listing with a complete description reduces buyer enquiries before purchase, reduces returns after purchase, and produces better reviews. The time you spend writing it once saves you the same conversation repeated across ten transactions.

Tab 2 — Organise

This tab controls where your listing appears in search and browsing. Two fields, both required.

Category

Select the category that best describes what you are selling. Choose as specific a category as the options allow. A listing in the correct category appears in front of buyers who are already looking for what you have. A listing in the wrong category appears in front of buyers who are not.

Sales Channel

Select the appropriate sales channel from the dropdown. This determines which storefront your listing is published to. For most sellers at this stage, there will be one option. Select it.

Tab 3 — Variants

Variants are how you handle a single product that comes in multiple configurations — different sizes, different fitment options, different quantities. Each variant gets its own price, its own SKU, and its own stock level.

At the top of this tab, you will see a toggle: 'Yes, this is a product with variants.'

If your product has no variants — one part, one price, one stock count:

Leave the toggle off. The system creates a default variant for you automatically. You set the price and stock count on that default variant. Done.

If your product has variants — for example, a brake pad set available for different car models:

Turn the toggle on. You will be asked to define your Product Options. An option has a Title (for example: 'Fitment') and Values (for example: 'Proton Saga', 'Perodua Myvi', 'Honda City'). Once your options are entered, the system generates all possible variant combinations in a table below. Each row in that table is one variant — set a price and SKU for each one you want to list.

For your first listing, if you are unsure whether to use variants, keep it simple. List one product, one configuration, one price. You can always add variants later by editing the listing from the Products page.

Once all three tabs are complete, click Save. Your listing is created in draft status — not yet visible to buyers. Continue to Lesson 2 to add photos before publishing.

Modules 1.3 - Progress

Publish Your First Listing

·

3 Lessons

1

2 minutes

·

Video + Article

2

2 minutes

·

Video + Article

3

2 minutes

·

Video + Article