skills/pages/legal/shipping/SKILL.md
When the user wants to create or optimize a shipping or delivery information page. Also use when the user mentions "shipping," "delivery," "shipping policy," "delivery times," "shipping page," "free shipping," "shipping rates," "delivery options," "shipping info," "cross-border shipping," "international delivery," or "order tracking." For legal overview, use legal-page-generator.
npx skillsauth add kostja94/marketing-skills shipping-page-generatorInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Guides shipping and delivery information page content for e-commerce, covering domestic and cross-border logistics, regulatory compliance, and AI-era discoverability.
When invoking: On first use, if helpful, open with 1–2 sentences on what this skill covers and why it matters, then provide the main output. On subsequent use or when the user asks to skip, go directly to the main output.
Identify:
| Scope | Key Considerations | |---|---| | Domestic Only | Simplest; focus on carrier options, timelines, cutoffs, free-shipping thresholds | | Regional (e.g., EU-wide) | Harmonized customs within single market; local carrier partnerships; OOH networks | | Cross-Border / Global | DDP vs DDU; customs duties transparency; multi-carrier tracking normalization; per-market configurability |
The most significant shift in 2025–2026: 58% of consumers have replaced traditional search engines with GenAI tools for product research and price comparison (Capgemini 2026). AI shopping agents compare delivery dates, costs, return terms, and total landed costs before the shopper ever visits your site.
What this means for shipping policies:
Practical recommendations:
OfferShippingDetails) on product and checkout pagesTwo major compliance deadlines converge in summer 2026:
A fixed €3 customs duty applies to all consignments valued under €150 entering the EU. This covers 93% of e-commerce imports into the EU.
Shipping policy impact:
Online marketplaces and e-commerce platforms using AI for shipping decisions (carrier selection, delivery predictions, automated refund/reroute decisions) must comply with transparency obligations:
This is now a commercial decision, not just a shipping detail:
| Model | Pros | Cons | Best For | |---|---|---|---| | DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) | No doorstep surprises; higher conversion; better AI agent compatibility | Higher upfront logistics complexity; need duty calculation infrastructure | Cross-border brands prioritizing customer experience | | DDU (Delivered Duty Unpaid) | Simpler for merchant; lower displayed price at checkout | Doorstep shock; high refused-parcel rates; damages repeat purchase | Low-frequency exporters; items where duties are unpredictable |
Policy language for DDP: "All duties, taxes, and customs fees are included in the price shown at checkout. You will not be charged additional fees on delivery."
Policy language for DDU: "International orders may be subject to customs duties and import taxes. These charges are your responsibility and are collected by the carrier upon delivery. Estimated fees: [range or calculator link]."
Cross-border shipments pass through multiple carriers (origin carrier → customs broker → destination carrier → last-mile). Customers need one coherent tracking story, not fragmented statuses from each handoff.
Policy should state:
OOH delivery via lockers and parcel shops is no longer a niche option:
Policy must include:
| Element | What to Include | |---------|----------------| | Regions served | Countries/regions you ship to; any restrictions or exclusions | | Carriers & methods | Standard, express, overnight; carrier names; real-time vs flat-rate; OOH options | | Costs | Flat rate, weight-based, carrier-calculated, free-shipping threshold; DDP/DDU designation | | Processing time | Time between order and handoff to carrier (e.g., "1–3 business days") | | Transit time | Estimated delivery window per method and region; note that international estimates include customs | | Cutoff times | Order-by time for same-day/next-day processing | | Tracking | When and how tracking is provided; multi-carrier normalization approach | | Customs & duties | DDP or DDU; estimated fees; who is responsible; landed-cost transparency | | Restrictions | Items that cannot be shipped; countries excluded | | Lost / damaged / delayed | Process for reporting issues; resolution timeline; carrier claim process | | Address accuracy | Customer responsibility for correct address; redirection/rerouting fees | | Returns logistics | How to return; who pays return shipping; OOH return options | | Force majeure | Delivery delays outside your control (weather, customs, carrier issues) |
| Method | Processing | Domestic Transit | International Transit | |--------|-----------|-----------------|----------------------| | Standard | 1–3 business days | 3–7 business days | 7–21 business days | | Express | 1 business day (with cutoff) | 1–3 business days | 3–7 business days | | Overnight | Same day (with cutoff) | Next business day | N/A |
Customers spend significant time on order-tracking pages and delivery-status messages. This real estate is underutilized:
Policy doesn't need to address this directly, but the delivery experience described in the policy should align with the actual post-purchase UX.
Modern delivery management platforms now include these capabilities as table stakes. When recommending tooling to e-commerce clients:
| Capability | Why It Matters | |------------|----------------| | AI carrier rate shopping | Automatically select best carrier/service per shipment; pilots show 10–20% cost reduction | | Normalized multi-carrier tracking | Map disparate carrier statuses into one coherent customer story | | Predictive delivery risk detection | Flag delays before shipment leaves warehouse | | Auditable decision governance | Required under EU AI Act — show what rule fired and why | | Returns management with proof of drop-off | Reduce fraud; track return status end-to-end | | Per-market policy configurability | Adjust delivery options, fees, windows by region |
Surface shipping information at every decision point:
data-ai
When the user wants to add or optimize Twitter Card metadata for X (Twitter) link previews. Also use when the user mentions "Twitter Card," "twitter:card," "twitter:image," "twitter:title," "X preview," or "tweet preview." For Facebook/LinkedIn previews, use open-graph.
testing
When the user wants to add or optimize Open Graph metadata for social sharing. Also use when the user mentions "Open Graph," "og:tags," "og:title," "og:image," "og:description," "Facebook preview," "LinkedIn preview," or "social share preview." For X (Twitter) link previews, use twitter-cards. For SERP title/description, use title-tag and meta-description.
tools
When the user wants to create, optimize, or structure Terms of Service page. Also use when the user mentions "terms of service," "terms and conditions," "terms of use," "user agreement," "ToS," "legal terms," "service agreement," or "terms page." For legal overview page, use legal-page-generator.
tools
When the user wants to create or optimize a refund or return policy page. Also use when the user mentions "refund policy," "return policy," "money-back guarantee," "returns and refunds," "refund page," "return process," "refund terms," "satisfaction guarantee," "cancellation policy," or "withdrawal right." For legal overview, use legal-page-generator.