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We only launch a category once we have enough independent depth to give honest guidance.
To arrive at the full, personalised set of considerations — and the right weighting between them — that constitutes an informed decision for you: not one decisive factor, but the particular combination of parameters your situation actually demands, which is rarely the set or the priorities you assumed when you began.
In a high-consideration purchase, putting your finger on it is the act of resolving the whole picture rather than any single feature. The right choice for you is a configuration — a specific bundle of needs, constraints, trade-offs and trust signals, each weighted by your own circumstances. Generic recommendations and star ratings optimise an average buyer's configuration; they cannot reproduce yours, because they don't carry your kitchen's dimensions, your real driving, your tolerance for maintenance, or the future you're quietly buying for.
What makes this hard is that the configuration is not fixed at the outset — it emerges. You start with a set of parameters you think matter and a rough sense of their order. Then learning reveals a consideration you'd never heard of; finding real candidates exposes a trade-off you didn't know existed; and somewhere in the loop your priorities quietly re-rank themselves. The thing you swore was non-negotiable slips down the list, and a parameter you'd never written down turns out to be the one carrying the most weight. "Putting your finger on it" is the point at which that shifting set finally settles into a combination you recognise as genuinely, completely yours — and can stand behind.
Purchase regret is what happens when you commit before the set has settled — deciding against the parameters and priorities you walked in with, rather than the ones the process would have revealed. The regret traces not to a single missed feature but to a whole configuration you never finished assembling: considerations left out, weightings left at their naive starting values, a personal calculus you only completed after the product was already in your life.
"I started out certain it was all about capacity and finish. By the time I put my finger on it, the list had completely reshuffled — door clearance, hinge side, and noise mattered far more than the two things I'd fixated on. I only assembled the real picture three weeks after the fridge was installed, against the wrong bench."
"I bought the car the experts ranked first, on the criteria I thought I cared about. Six months in I finally put my finger on it: the parameters that actually mattered to me — my commute, my passengers, resale in my market — were a different set entirely, weighted differently again. No single feature was wrong; the whole combination was someone else's."