Sales Shipments
Audience: Sales team, warehouse managers, shipping clerks
Overview
A sales shipment is a transaction that records goods sent to customers. This decreases your inventory and represents items leaving the business as revenue.
Key Point: Sales shipments reduce inventory—items that existed in your system are now gone (sold to customers).
What is a Sales Shipment?
Definition
A transaction that records:
- What was shipped (items and quantities)
- To whom (customer)
- When it was shipped
- From where (location)
- Why (sales order, invoice reference)
Examples
- Shipping 50 bottles to a retail customer
- Delivering 100 perfume gift sets to a corporate client
- Sending sample products to a potential customer
Sales Shipment Workflow
Real-World Example
Scenario: Shipping to Retail Customer
Background:
- Customer ordered 100 bottles of Midnight Rose Perfume 50ml
- Sales Order: SO-2024-5678
- Customer: Luxury Boutique NYC
Before Shipment:
Item: Midnight Rose Perfume 50ml
Location: Main Warehouse
Quantity: 500 bottles
Warehouse Process:
- Pick 100 bottles from Main Warehouse
- Stage at Shipping Dock
- Pack in 4 boxes (25 bottles each)
- Create shipping label
- Ready to ship
Sales Shipment Created:
- Item: Midnight Rose Perfume 50ml
- Quantity: 100 bottles
- Unit: Pieces
- Location: Main Warehouse
- Customer: Luxury Boutique NYC
- Invoice Number: INV-2024-9012
- Sales Order: SO-2024-5678
- Ship Date: October 28, 2024
- Carrier: UPS
- Tracking: 1Z999AA10123456784
- Shipped By: Sarah Johnson (Warehouse Clerk)
After Shipment:
Item: Midnight Rose Perfume 50ml
Location: Main Warehouse
Quantity: 400 bottles (-100)
Financial Impact:
- Inventory decreased by $1,000 (100 bottles × $10 cost)
- Revenue recognized: $3,000 (100 bottles × $30 selling price)
- Gross profit: $2,000
What Gets Recorded
Basic Information
-
Items Shipped
- Item name/number
- Quantity
- Unit of measure
-
Customer Information
- Customer name
- Invoice number
- Sales order reference
-
Location
- Where items were shipped from (usually Main Warehouse)
-
Shipping Details
- Ship date
- Carrier (UPS, FedEx, etc.)
- Tracking number
- Shipping address
-
Authorization
- Who picked the items
- Who created the shipment transaction
Types of Sales Shipments
1. Full Shipment
Definition: Shipped everything ordered
Example:
- Ordered: 50 bottles
- Shipped: 50 bottles ✓
Result: Sales order fully closed
2. Partial Shipment
Definition: Shipped less than ordered (backorder remaining)
Example:
- Ordered: 100 bottles
- Shipped: 60 bottles (40 on backorder)
Result: Shipment created for 60, sales order remains open for 40
3. Multiple Shipments
Definition: Order split across multiple shipments
Example:
- Ordered: 500 bottles
- Shipment #1: 300 bottles (from Warehouse A)
- Shipment #2: 200 bottles (from Warehouse B)
Result: Two separate shipment transactions, both reference same sales order
4. Drop Shipment
Definition: Shipped directly from supplier to customer (never in your warehouse)
Example:
- Customer orders special item
- You order from supplier
- Supplier ships directly to your customer
Inventory Impact: May not touch your inventory (supplier → customer)
Business Scenarios
Scenario 1: Standard Retail Order
Steps:
- Pick 50 bottles from Storage
- Move to Shipping Dock (staging)
- Pack and label
- Create sales shipment transaction
- Inventory decreases by 50
- Ship to customer
Scenario 2: Multi-Location Fulfillment
Order: 200 bottles Inventory:
- Warehouse A: 120 bottles
- Warehouse B: 150 bottles
Decision: Ship from both locations
Shipment #1 (from Warehouse A):
- Quantity: 120 bottles
- Location: Warehouse A
Shipment #2 (from Warehouse B):
- Quantity: 80 bottles
- Location: Warehouse B
Result: Customer receives 200 bottles total (2 packages)
Scenario 3: Corporate Bulk Order
Order: 1,000 bottles to corporate client
Process:
- Pick 1,000 bottles from Main Warehouse
- Pack on 4 pallets
- Create sales shipment for 1,000 bottles
- Load on freight truck
- Ship to client's distribution center
Difference: Larger quantity, freight shipping, pallet-level handling
Integration with Sales
Sales Order Connection
Typical Flow:
- Sales Order Created (in sales/CRM system)
- Inventory allocated
- Pick and pack (warehouse)
- Create Sales Shipment (inventory system)
- Invoice Created (accounting system)
- Payment collected
Invoicing
Relationship:
- Sales shipment often triggers invoice creation
- Invoice references shipment for items/quantities
- Some businesses invoice before shipping, some after
Example:
Sales Order SO-1234: 100 bottles ordered
Sales Shipment #1: 60 bottles shipped → Invoice INV-001 for 60
Sales Shipment #2: 40 bottles shipped → Invoice INV-002 for 40
See: Sales Integration
Business Rules
Rule 1: Items Must Be Stockable
Valid:
- Shipping 100 bottles of perfume ✓
Invalid:
- Shipping "consulting service" ✗
Why: Services don't have physical inventory
See: Stockable Items
Rule 2: Shipment Decreases Inventory
Before Shipment:
- Rose Perfume: 300 bottles
After Shipment (-50 bottles):
- Rose Perfume: 250 bottles
Inventory goes DOWN (fundamental characteristic)
Rule 3: Must Have Sufficient Inventory
Scenario: 30 bottles in stock, customer orders 50
Options:
- If negative stock allowed: Ship 50, inventory goes to -20
- If negative stock forbidden: Can only ship 30, backorder 20
Rule 4: Shipments Are Immutable
Once created, shipments cannot be edited.
If mistake:
- Create a return/credit transaction (customer returns)
- Or create a stock adjustment (if never actually shipped)
Why: Audit trail, financial accuracy
Common Questions
Q: Can I ship without a sales order?
A: Depends on company policy.
Common Scenarios:
- Samples: May ship without formal sales order
- Warranty replacements: Ship as customer service
- Internal transfers: Use stock movement instead
Best Practice: Always have sales order for revenue-generating shipments
Q: What if customer refuses delivery?
A: Options:
- Return to inventory: Create stock adjustment to reverse
- Hold as return: Receive back when physically returned
- Keep shipped status: If customer will accept later
Q: Can I ship to multiple addresses for one order?
A: Yes, create multiple shipment transactions, each with different shipping address.
Example:
- Order: 200 bottles
- Shipment #1: 100 bottles to Address A
- Shipment #2: 100 bottles to Address B
Q: What if I ship wrong quantity by mistake?
A: After shipment is created:
- Cannot edit the shipment
- Options:
- Create return/credit if overshipped
- Create additional shipment if undershipped
- Contact customer to resolve
Prevention: Double-check before creating shipment!
Q: Do I need to create shipment before or after physical shipping?
A: Best practice: Create shipment when items physically leave
Why:
- Inventory accuracy (reflects actual stock)
- Financial accuracy (revenue recognition timing)
- Audit trail matches physical events
Best Practices
1. Pick Accuracy
Ensure Correct Items:
- Verify item numbers
- Check descriptions
- Confirm packaging
- Double-count quantities
Tools:
- Barcode scanners
- Pick lists with photos
- Two-person verification (for high-value)
2. Pack Securely
Protect Items:
- Appropriate packaging materials
- Cushioning for fragile items
- Seal boxes properly
- Clear, accurate labeling
3. Create Shipments Promptly
Timing: Create shipment when items leave facility
Why:
- Real-time inventory accuracy
- Financial reporting (revenue recognition)
- Customer tracking
Don't: Create shipments days after physical shipping
4. Document Shipping Details
Always Record:
- Carrier name
- Tracking number
- Number of packages
- Weight
- Shipping address
Why: Customer service, delivery issues, claims
5. Reserve High-Value Shipments for Manager Review
Threshold Example: Orders over $5,000 require manager approval before shipping
Why:
- Prevent fraud
- Verify creditworthiness
- Double-check accuracy
Shipping Metrics
Shipment Accuracy
Month: October 2024
Total Shipments: 450
Picking Errors: 12
Accuracy Rate: 97.3%
Types of Errors:
- Wrong item: 5
- Wrong quantity: 4
- Damaged in packing: 3
On-Time Shipment Rate
Metric Rate
─────────────────────────────────
Shipped same day: 85%
Shipped next day: 12%
Shipped 2+ days late: 3%
Goal: 95% same-day
Order Fulfillment Cycle
Metric Time
─────────────────────────────────
Order to Pick: 1.5 hours
Pick to Pack: 2.0 hours
Pack to Ship: 1.0 hours
Total Cycle: 4.5 hours
Integration with Other Concepts
Stock Movements
Before Shipment: May move from Storage → Shipping Dock
See: Stock Movements
Finance Integration
Impact: Shipments decrease inventory, recognize revenue
See: Finance Integration
Sales Integration
Connection: Shipments fulfill sales orders, trigger invoices
See: Sales Integration
Related Concepts
- Inventory Basics - Foundation concepts
- Stockable Items - What can be shipped
- Purchase Receipts - Opposite transaction (receiving)
- Stock Movements - Moving before shipping
- Sales Integration - Order fulfillment
- Finance Integration - Revenue impact
Last Updated: 2025-10-28