Our Packing Slip spreadsheet is for businesses using our sales invoice template that have requested a corresponding packing slip. Some business usually choose to include a copy of the invoice with the shipment, but that can create confusion if the customer has already paid for the items. It also lets you indicate whether the customer should expect multiple boxes and whether items are on backorder.
Order packing slip
The spreadsheet is a simple and easy tool for printing packing slips. It is design to work with and compliment our purchase order and sales invoice templates.
If you want to get really fancy, you can copy the worksheet into the sales invoice workbook and link up the cells so that when you create a new invoice, most of the info is updated automatically.
The XLSX version of the spreadsheet now contains an ink-friendly design.
Added a couple sample Shape objects to the XLSX version to allow you to simulate a stamp such as “Paid in Full” by moving the shape object over prior to printing.
Using the Packing Slip Template
Below are some things to keep in mind as you are using and customizing a template.
The Date: The date in the upper right uses the =TODAY() function which will always display the current date. If you want to save an archival copy. You may want to manually enter the date so that it doesn’t change when you open the file again.
Adding Rows: You can insert rows for more items, but afterwards you should check the Totals to confirm they referenced the correct cells.
Adding Comments: The comments block is for including notes to your customer or carrier. Instead of making one large cell for the comment block like many other templates, each line is a separate cell so you can easily add/delete common comments.
Following are the examples where we can use :
- Ebay packing slip
- Amazon packing slip
- fedex packing slip