Shipment Process Management

Production is complete. What happens between the factory and your destination still needs control.

Shipment Process Management establishes structured control between confirmed production readiness and destination delivery requirements. The focus is documentation governance, shipment coordination, and Incoterm alignment before goods move toward destination. It is not logistics execution — it is buyer-side oversight of the shipment stage.

Turkey-Origin Sourcing Buyer-Side Procurement Governance No Commissions - No Trading - No Supplier Affiliation USA - EU - MENA - Balkans
THE CORE PROBLEM

Production is confirmed complete. The shipment stage is where control is lost.

What typically happens at shipment stage

The supplier arranges the shipment under terms that favour their position. Documents are issued without the buyer's review. Incoterms are accepted without assessing which party carries risk at each stage. The bill of lading may be issued under details the buyer has not confirmed. A preventable documentation gap then appears at destination.

What shipment process management provides

Structured buyer-side coordination of the shipment stage: Incoterm alignment, export document set review, shipping document oversight before departure, and destination-readiness confirmation. The buyer retains visibility and control before goods move toward destination.

“A documentation gap at customs costs more than the document would have. Shipment control is not logistics management — it is structured oversight of the stage where procurement exposure is highest.”

Where Shipment Control Fails

Six failure points — all occurring after production is confirmed complete.

Each failure below is preventable at the shipment stage. Each becomes costly once goods are already in transit or waiting at destination.

01
Incoterm accepted without exposure assessment

EXW accepted without freight arrangement. FOB accepted without confirming who nominates the vessel. Risk and cost allocation remain unclear until a problem surfaces.

02
Bill of lading issued without buyer review

The supplier or forwarder issues the bill of lading under terms or in a name the buyer has not confirmed. Title and payment release become tied to a document the buyer has not reviewed.

03
Export documents incomplete at departure

Certificate of origin, packing list, commercial invoice, or export licence may be missing, mismatched, or incorrectly formatted. The gap appears only after goods move toward destination.

04
Certification documents not included in shipment set

CE declaration, halal certificate, OEKO-TEX confirmation, or other required market-entry documents may be absent from the shipment document set, delaying or blocking import readiness.

05
Destination import requirements not aligned before departure

EU, UK, US, Canada, or MENA import requirements differ by product and market. Misalignment is often discovered only after goods are already in transit.

06
Shipment released without payment term alignment

Goods may be released before payment confirmation is clear, or payment may be released before the document set is confirmed complete. The handover point remains uncontrolled.

WHAT HANA SOLUTION DOES

Structured shipment coordination — from production readiness to destination readiness.

Five structured steps. Each produces a documented output. The buyer retains oversight of the shipment stage — not the supplier, not the freight forwarder.

01

Confirm shipment readiness and Incoterm alignment

Shipment management begins once production readiness is confirmed. The agreed Incoterm is reviewed against the buyer's risk appetite, destination market requirements, and freight arrangement. Incoterm selection determines who carries risk, who arranges transport, and who controls documentation at each stage.

02

Review and coordinate the export document set

The full export documentation set is reviewed before departure: commercial invoice, packing list, certificate of origin, export declaration, and any market-specific certificates. Each document is checked for completeness, consistency, and alignment with the purchase order and destination import requirements.

03

Review shipping documents before release

Bill of lading, airway bill, or other transport documents are reviewed before release. Consignee details, notify party, description of goods, and terms of the transport document are confirmed against the buyer's requirements before the shipment departs.

04

Confirm certification documentation in the shipment set

Market-entry certifications required for the destination — CE declaration of conformity, halal certificate, OEKO-TEX confirmation, GMP documentation, or others where applicable — are confirmed as present, correctly scoped, and included in the shipment document set before departure.

05

Coordinate destination-readiness confirmation

Destination import requirements — customs classification, import permit, labelling compliance, or market-specific registration where applicable — are reviewed against the shipment document set. Any gaps identified before departure are flagged for resolution before goods move toward destination.

What You Receive

Incoterm Alignment Summary

Risk, cost, and control allocation reviewed before shipment instruction and documented for buyer reference.

Document Compliance Checklist

Full export document set reviewed against purchase order and destination requirements, with gaps flagged before departure.

Shipping Document Review

Bill of lading or airway bill reviewed before release, including consignee, notify party, terms, and goods description.

Certification Confirmation

Market-entry certifications confirmed as present, correctly scoped, and included in the shipment document set where applicable.

Destination Readiness Summary

Import requirement alignment reviewed, with customs, labelling, registration, or market-specific gaps identified before departure.

INCOTERM & DOCUMENT FRAMEWORK

Incoterm selection determines who controls risk, cost, and documentation at each stage.

The table below illustrates how common Incoterms differ in terms of buyer responsibility, risk transfer point, and documentation control. Incoterm alignment is confirmed before any shipment instruction is issued.

Incoterm Buyer Responsibility Starts Risk Transfer Point Key Document Control Point
EXW At factory gate — buyer arranges freight and transport structure At factory — maximum buyer exposure Export declaration and transport arrangement become buyer-controlled
FOB Once goods are on board the vessel On board at port of loading Bill of lading becomes the critical document review point
CIF Buyer responsibility increases at destination handling stage On board at port of loading Insurance policy and bill of lading require review
DAP At named destination — unloading remains buyer responsibility At named destination before unloading Destination import document readiness becomes critical
DDP Goods delivered with seller-managed import responsibility At destination Buyer should verify import feasibility and documentation alignment before acceptance
EXW
Buyer Responsibility Starts
At factory gate — buyer arranges freight and transport structure.
Risk Transfer Point
At factory — maximum buyer exposure.
Key Document Control Point
Export declaration and transport arrangement become buyer-controlled.
FOB
Buyer Responsibility Starts
Once goods are on board the vessel.
Risk Transfer Point
On board at port of loading.
Key Document Control Point
Bill of lading becomes the critical document review point.
CIF
Buyer Responsibility Starts
Buyer responsibility increases at destination handling stage.
Risk Transfer Point
On board at port of loading.
Key Document Control Point
Insurance policy and bill of lading require review.
DAP
Buyer Responsibility Starts
At named destination — unloading remains buyer responsibility.
Risk Transfer Point
At named destination before unloading.
Key Document Control Point
Destination import document readiness becomes critical.
DDP
Buyer Responsibility Starts
Goods delivered with seller-managed import responsibility.
Risk Transfer Point
At destination.
Key Document Control Point
Buyer should verify import feasibility and documentation alignment before acceptance.
Shipment governance note:

Incoterm selection is reviewed before shipment instruction is issued. The appropriate term depends on freight arrangement, destination market requirements, and risk allocation — not supplier preference alone.
Document Set — What Is Reviewed

Every shipment requires a complete, market-aligned document set.

The document categories below are reviewed against the purchase order, agreed Incoterm, and destination import requirements before departure is confirmed.

Commercial Documents
  • Commercial invoice
  • Packing list
  • Purchase order alignment
  • Proforma invoice, where applicable
Transport Documents
  • Bill of lading for sea freight
  • Airway bill for air freight
  • CMR / road transport documents
  • Consignee and notify party details
Export & Customs Documents
  • Certificate of origin
  • A.TR / EUR.1 / Form A, where applicable
  • Turkish export declaration
  • Customs classification alignment
  • Export licence, where required
Certification Documents
  • CE Declaration of Conformity
  • Halal certificate, where required
  • OEKO-TEX / GMP confirmation
  • ISO and test reports, as applicable
Destination-Specific Documents
  • EU import requirements by HS code
  • UKCA / conformity documentation
  • US FDA / import documents, where applicable
  • MENA customs and halal requirements
Payment & Title Documents
  • Letter of credit document alignment
  • Payment term vs. document release
  • Title transfer point confirmation
  • Insurance certificate for CIF / CIP
Scope Boundary — Production Monitoring vs Shipment Management

Two adjacent engagements — with a clear boundary between them.

Production Monitoring ends when shipment readiness is confirmed. Shipment Process Management begins at that point and covers the coordination, Incoterm alignment, and documentation control layer through to destination readiness.

Production Monitoring — Ends Here
  • Production milestone tracking
  • Deviation detection and correction
  • Subcontracting and material substitution control
  • Pre-shipment inspection — quality, quantity, packing
  • CE / ISO documentation review at factory
  • Shipment readiness confirmation
Shipment Management — Begins Here
  • Incoterm alignment and risk confirmation
  • Export document set review and coordination
  • Shipping document review before release
  • Certification documents included in shipment set
  • Destination import requirement alignment
  • Document compliance summary
Scope Boundaries

What this engagement covers — and what it does not.

Shipment Process Management covers the buyer-side coordination, Incoterm alignment, and documentation control layer after production readiness is confirmed. It does not replace freight forwarders, customs brokers, or logistics execution partners.

Included in this engagement
  • Incoterm alignment and risk allocation confirmation
  • Export document set review — completeness and consistency
  • Shipping document review before departure
  • Certification documentation confirmation in shipment set
  • Destination import requirement alignment
  • Document compliance checklist
  • Destination readiness summary
  • Payment term vs. document release alignment review
Not included — separate services
  • ×Freight booking or logistics execution
  • ×Customs clearance at destination
  • ×Insurance arrangement or claims handling
  • ×Production monitoring or factory visits
  • ×Supplier negotiation or commercial dispute
  • ×Product trading, commission sourcing, or mark-up
Note: Hana Solution provides documented coordination and buyer-side oversight at the shipment stage. Freight execution, customs clearance, and logistics operations are managed by the buyer's chosen freight and customs partners.
Where This Fits

Shipment Management is Step 6 — the final governance layer.

This is the final stage of the procurement governance sequence. Once shipment readiness is confirmed and the document set is reviewed, the buyer proceeds with destination clearance and delivery through its appointed freight and customs partners.

Step 01
Sourcing Direction
Complete
Step 02
Supplier Mapping
Complete
Step 03
Supplier Verification
Complete
Step 04
RFQ Governance
Complete
Step 05
Production Monitoring
Complete
Step 06 — Final Stage
Shipment Management
Document control layer
Industries

Shipment management applied — by sector and destination market.

The document review framework is consistent. What changes by sector and destination market is the certification scope, customs classification complexity, and market-specific import requirements, where applicable.

Food & FMCG
Halal certificate inclusion, health certificate alignment, and cold-chain documentation are reviewed before departure for EU and MENA shipments, where applicable.
Textile & Apparel
OEKO-TEX confirmation, country of origin documentation, and EU / UK customs classification alignment are reviewed before departure, where applicable.
Cosmetics & Personal Care
EU cosmetics documentation, CPNP-related confirmation, and MENA registration documents are reviewed against shipment requirements, where applicable.
Cleaning Products
SDS documentation alignment, CLP labelling compliance, and BPR documentation are reviewed against destination import requirements, where applicable.
Machinery & Equipment
CE Declaration of Conformity, technical file reference, and EU customs classification alignment are confirmed in the shipment document set, where applicable.
Construction Materials
Declaration of Performance, CE marking documentation, and EN standard references are confirmed in the export document set for EU and Balkans shipments, where applicable.
Furniture & Interior
REACH documentation, formaldehyde test report inclusion, and EU customs classification alignment are reviewed before departure, where applicable.
Electrical & Lighting
CE, RoHS, WEEE documentation, and EPREL registration reference are reviewed for EU lighting product shipments, where applicable.
Medical & Technical Products
EU MDR technical documentation, ISO 13485 reference, and destination-specific import permit requirements are reviewed before departure, where applicable.
Defence & Security
Procurement advisory only. Export licence standing, controlled goods documentation, and regulatory documentation are reviewed where applicable — no product trading or arms supply.
Frequently Asked Questions

What buyers ask before commissioning shipment management.

Our freight forwarder handles the shipment documents. Do we still need this?

A freight forwarders manage logistics execution — booking, transport, and cargo movement. They do not typically review documents from the buyer’s commercial and compliance perspective. Shipment Process Management reviews document completeness, purchase order consistency, Incoterm alignment, and destination import requirements before departure. These are different functions.

Production Monitoring covers what happens inside the factory — milestone tracking, deviation detection, pre-shipment inspection, and production readiness confirmation. Shipment Process Management begins once shipment readiness is confirmed and covers Incoterm alignment, export document review, shipping document confirmation, and destination import requirement alignment. The two engagements are adjacent but distinct in scope.

No. Hana Solution does not arrange freight, book logistics, or manage customs clearance. These activities are handled by the buyer’s selected freight forwarder and customs partners. Shipment Process Management focuses on document coordination and buyer-side oversight before goods enter the freight execution process.

Yes. Destination import requirements are reviewed per shipment and per market. EU, UK, USA, Canada, and MENA markets may have different documentation, customs classification, and certification requirements. Where shipments involve multiple destinations, document requirements are reviewed individually.

Shipment Process Management should begin once production readiness is confirmed — not after goods are already loaded. Incoterm alignment, document preparation, and shipping document review should take place before departure. Starting at the loading stage significantly reduces the opportunity to identify and correct documentation gaps.

No. Freight forwarders execute transport and logistics operations. Shipment Process Management provides buyer-side coordination and document control before shipment execution begins. The purpose is oversight and risk reduction — not freight execution.

 
 
 
START SHIPMENT MANAGEMENT

Control the shipment stage before goods leave Turkey.

Submit your shipment details and destination market requirements. We review Incoterm alignment, document requirements, and destination readiness before shipment departure — not after goods are already in transit.