Map failure by route and handling stage
Grouped damage evidence by SKU, carrier lane, box condition, internal movement, and complaint reason before selecting design changes.
Case Studies
A direct-to-consumer program reduced transit damage by redesigning pack fit, cushioning strategy, and fulfillment handling rules.
Case Study
A direct-to-consumer program reduced transit damage by redesigning pack fit, cushioning strategy, and fulfillment handling rules.
At a glance
Customer type
Direct-to-consumer brand shipping fragile or presentation-sensitive products
Packaging formats
Ecommerce shipper · Corrugated outer carton · Protective insert · Void fill
Main issue
Transit damage kept increasing on mixed-carrier routes, but the team could not tell whether the failure was box strength, internal movement, or packing execution.
Project type
Shipping protection and fulfillment review
Common Industries
Ecommerce and consumer goods
Region
Domestic and cross-region delivery routes
Before
After
What we reviewed
What changed
Grouped damage evidence by SKU, carrier lane, box condition, internal movement, and complaint reason before selecting design changes.
Adjusted internal support points, edge protection, and cushioning placement around the actual movement and impact pattern.
Started with the routes and SKUs causing the most replacement work, then used feedback to decide broader rollout rules.
Could this apply to you?
Timeline
Evidence review
Sort damage examples by SKU, route, carton condition, and internal product movement.
Protection redesign
Adjust fit, cushioning zones, and handling rules for the highest-risk scenarios.
Lane validation
Use phased rollout feedback before extending the new rules to all shipments.
Evidence to track
Damage claims by lane
Track claims and replacement workload by SKU, route, and carrier stage.
Pack execution impact
Track packing time, material use, and exception handling after changes.
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