Shipping Starts In The Row
Shipping notes should be written while products are still being compared. Open the route, check whether the product still matches the saved row, and decide whether box, shape, weight, or fragile parts change the parcel.
A shoe row should say keep box, remove box, or decide after QC. A hoodie row should mention fabric weight and folded volume. A bag row should note shape, hardware, strap, and interior padding. Small accessories may need only a short packaging note.
Price Against Parcel Cost
A low product price can lose value when the shipping note shows bulky hoodie, structured bag, fragile hardware, or boxed shoe. The row should make that pressure visible before checkout.
Compare duplicated routes with shipping in mind. One seller page may show better photos, while another route has a clearer box choice or smaller parcel risk. The buyer should keep the route that makes the full decision cleaner.
QC Still Matters
Shipping notes should not replace QC. A product waiting on measurements, label photos, material views, or shape evidence should stay out of final parcel planning. Mark pending QC in the shipping column when the item is not settled.
Request a photo when one missing angle changes packing choice: shoe box label, bag interior, folded hoodie thickness, or fragile hardware close-up. Remove the row when shipping pressure is high and the route evidence is weak.
Parcel Edit
Before payment, scan rows marked box, bulky, fragile, structured, or pending. Decide keep, split parcel, request photo, compare route, or remove. This is a packing edit, not a generic article ending.
The strongest shipping note is short and tied to a decision. It should explain how the product changes parcel cost, space, or risk.
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