Join the waitlist for a shipping prep checker that combines item data and requested service so pickers know when packaging choice matters before label creation.
Example
See the kind of messy input this waitlist is validating and the product-style report it could return.
Example input
Uploaded file: daily_pick_list.csv Order,SKU,Item,Qty,Requested Service,Preferred Package,Notes 10042,MUG-12,Stoneware Mug,1,USPS Ground Advantage,Small Box, 10043,FRAME-16X20,Wood Frame 16x20,1,USPS Priority Mail,Flat Mailer,fragile 10044,AP-100,Linen Apron,3,UPS Ground,Poly Mailer, 10045,CANDLE-8,Glass Candle 8 oz,2,USPS Ground Advantage,Poly Mailer,glass
Example output
Report summary
Pick list reviewed for packaging conflicts caused by requested shipping service and item handling notes.
4
Orders checked
2
Packaging conflicts
2
Fragile flags
2
Clear picks
Detected findings
Fragile item assigned risky package
highOrder 10045 has glass items with Poly Mailer as preferred package.
Frame may not fit preferred package
mediumOrder 10043 combines 16x20 frame with Flat Mailer and Priority Mail service.
Service visibility helps pickers
lowRequested service can guide package selection before label creation.
Pick prep warnings
| Order | Risk | Suggested picker note |
|---|---|---|
| 10043 | Package fit | Verify rigid mailer or box |
| 10045 | Fragile + poly mailer | Use small box with padding |
| 10042 | No conflict | Proceed |
| 10044 | No conflict | Proceed |
Waitlist
Leave your email and optionally describe the exact file or workflow you would want checked.
FAQ
Does this choose shipping services?
No. It only highlights when the requested method or item notes may affect packing decisions.
Why use this before labels?
Because pickers often prepare packages before label creation, and missing shipping-method context can cause repacking.
What input does it need?
A pick list export with order, SKU, item, quantity, requested service, and packaging notes if available.
What should I write in the use case box?
Mention the package decisions your team gets wrong: flat rate boxes, fragile goods, multi-box orders, or oversized items.