How to classify home and garden in product taxonomy
The Home & Garden category shows how Enrich turns raw product pages into standard category paths, attributes, and comparable ecommerce records.
Product taxonomy classification means choosing the most specific category that describes the product itself, then attaching the attributes that make products in that category comparable. For home and garden, the current taxonomy path is Home & Garden.
Classify product data at ingestion time
Extralt Enrich applies taxonomy paths and category-specific attributes when ecommerce pages are captured, so the output is ready for filtering, price analysis, product matching, and market intelligence.
Category path
Child categories
Attribute table
| Attribute | Example values |
|---|---|
| Color | Beige, Black, Brown, Gray, White |
| Pattern | Abstract, Floral, Geometric, Solid, Striped |
Why this matters
Once products share a category path, analysts can compare offers, prices, attributes, and availability across stores without maintaining source-specific parsing rules.
Where Enrich fits
Enrich applies taxonomy classification at ingestion time, so downstream queries use structured product data instead of raw merchant text.
What to inspect
Check the leaf category, category-specific attributes, and values before deciding whether two source listings can be compared or matched.
Related reading
FAQ
Where does home and garden fit in product taxonomy?
home and garden fits under Home & Garden in this taxonomy snapshot. Extralt uses that path to normalize ecommerce product records so prices, offers, attributes, and seller data can be compared across sources.
Which attributes matter for home and garden?
home and garden records commonly use attributes such as Color, Pattern. These fields make category-level filtering and product matching more reliable.
How does Extralt classify home and garden products?
Extralt Enrich classifies captured ecommerce product pages into a standard category path, extracts category-specific attributes, normalizes text, and preserves source evidence so downstream analytics do not depend on merchant-specific page structure.