It's 4am. You're in the packing shed with trays stacked and a delivery round to load. The question is the same every morning: what goes on the van?
If you've got five customers, you can hold the list in your head. At fifteen, you can't. At twenty-five, you're scribbling on the back of a feed receipt and hoping you haven't missed anyone.
The packing list is the single most important document in your delivery morning. It tells you what to pack, how much, and for whom. The problem is that most egg producers don't have one - they have a collection of messages, mental notes, and last week's list with corrections scrawled in the margins.
What goes wrong without a proper list
You forget a customer
Not your biggest account. The one who orders three dozen every other week. The one you added last month. The one whose order you saw in a text and meant to write down. You're halfway through the round when you realise their eggs are still in the cold store.
You pack the wrong quantities
A customer changed their order from twelve dozen to eight. You saw the message but didn't update the list - because the list is your memory. So you load twelve, deliver twelve, and now you've got four dozen that were meant for someone else or need carrying home.
You can't hand the round to someone else
If you're ill, on holiday, or just want a morning off, someone else needs to do the round. What do you give them? Your phone? A verbal walkthrough of twenty customers and their usual orders? Without a written list, the round lives in your head. That makes you the bottleneck for every single delivery.
You drive back
The worst version. You finish the round, get home, and find trays still on the van. Or a customer calls because they got large instead of medium. Every return trip costs you fuel, time, and credibility.
Why a spreadsheet doesn't quite work
A spreadsheet is better than nothing. But it has the same fundamental problem as a handwritten list: you have to manually update it every time an order changes. That means checking messages, cross-referencing against last week, and retyping quantities. If an order comes in after you've printed the sheet, it's not on the list.
The list needs to build itself from confirmed orders. Otherwise you're still doing the assembly work - just in a slightly tidier format.
What a good packing list actually looks like
Simple. One page. For each customer on tomorrow's round:
- Customer name
- What they ordered (products and quantities)
- Any notes (delivery instructions, contact number, access codes)
That's it. No route optimisation. No GPS tracking. Just a clear, accurate list of what needs to go on the van, generated from orders that customers have actually placed.
The key word is "generated." You shouldn't be building this list. It should build itself from the orders in your system. When a customer places an order for Monday, it appears on Monday's packing list. When they change the quantity, the list updates. When a new customer orders for the first time, they're on the list automatically.
How to get there
Get orders into one place first
A packing list is only as good as the orders behind it. If orders are scattered across WhatsApp, texts, and voicemails, no list - handwritten, spreadsheet, or software - will be reliable. The first step is getting all orders into a single system. Once they're there, the packing list writes itself.
Use it as a delivery checklist
Tick off each customer as you load their trays. Tick again when you deliver. If something doesn't match - a customer isn't on the list, a quantity looks wrong - you catch it before you leave, not at the customer's door.
How Wholesale Handler solves this
Wholesale Handler generates packing slips from confirmed orders. Each customer's order shows their name, products, and quantities. You print it, pack to it, and deliver with it.
When a customer places or updates an order through the portal, the packing slip reflects it. You're not transcribing from messages or updating a spreadsheet. The list is always current because it's built directly from what customers have ordered.
No route planning, no fleet management, no delivery tracking. Just an accurate list of what goes on the van.
Wholesale Handler



