No Salvage Lead Lost Between Sessions
That demolition notice from three weeks ago? Still in your searchable private database, alongside every estate listing and period hardware catalog you've browsed since.
Last month you spotted six matching Victorian transom windows on an estate sale site in Portland. Today a client walks in asking for exactly that. You try your bookmarks — nothing. Browser history — buried under three weeks of supplier catalogs and building permit searches. Screenshots — you took one, but it didn't capture the seller's contact. TabVault indexed the full page the moment you opened the tab. Search "Victorian transom Portland" and the listing reappears with every detail intact: dimensions, asking price, seller phone number, even the abutting lot's demolition permit you'd opened in the next tab.
Benefit 1
Title: Lead Pipeline That Never Leaks
Benefit 2
Title: Demolition Timeline Tracking
Benefit 3
Title: Price Intelligence Across Weeks
Benefit 4
Title: Period-Accurate Hardware Matching
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Related Articles
View all articles →Turning Browser Tabs Into a Searchable Salvage Inventory Pipeline
Most salvage dealers source inventory by browsing -- estate sales, demolition notices, auction previews, marketplace listings -- but that browsing produces nothing durable. Tabs close, listings expire, and the sourcing intelligence disappears. A searchable salvage inventory system built from indexed browser sessions turns that ephemeral browsing into a permanent pipeline that feeds your inventory with leads you can search, filter, and act on weeks after you first saw them.
How Tab Indexing Captures Listing Details That Screenshots Miss
Salvage dealers screenshot listings to preserve details -- but screenshots are unsearchable images that pile up in folders nobody revisits. Tab indexing captures every word on a listing page, making dimensions, materials, prices, and contact information searchable by keyword months after you closed the tab. Here is why full-text indexing beats screenshots for architectural salvage listing research.
Getting Started With Estate Sale, Auction, and Catalog Indexing
Estate sale listings, auction catalogs, and period hardware references are the three pillars of online salvage sourcing -- and all three produce pages that vanish when you close the tab. Estate sale auction indexing turns those fleeting sessions into a permanent archive you search by material, date, price, or any other keyword. Here is how to get started with catalog indexing for architectural salvage.
What Reclamation Yard Owners Should Know About Tab Search
Reclamation yard owners spend hours each week sourcing online -- monitoring demolition permits, browsing estate sales, checking auction catalogs, scanning marketplace listings -- but most of that research disappears when the browser closes. Reclamation yard tab search turns that lost sourcing work into a permanent, searchable archive. Here is what yard owners need to know about adding tab search to their digital toolkit.
Monitoring Demolition Notices Across Multiple City Portals
A salvage dealer in the mid-Atlantic lost a warehouse full of pre-war marble to a competitor who spotted the demolition notice three days earlier on a different city portal. When your sourcing territory spans multiple municipalities, each with its own permit database and notification system, demolition notice city portal monitoring becomes a daily grind that browser tabs alone cannot sustain.
Why Demolition Notice Monitoring Needs Searchable Session Archives
Demolition permits are among the most valuable lead sources for architectural salvage dealers, but tracking demolition permits online across multiple municipal portals creates a tab management nightmare. Each permit filing is a time-sensitive opportunity -- a building scheduled for demolition contains materials that must be salvaged before the wrecking crew arrives. Here is why demolition notice monitoring needs a searchable session archive.