eCommerce shipping guide: Setting shipping platform rules
Many eCommerce shipping platforms default to the lowest-cost carrier unless configured otherwise. While that may reduce shipping spend in the short term, the cheapest option is not always the most reliable or cost-effective.
Key points
- Setting your shipping platform to choose carriers based on reliability, not just price, helps ensure a better delivery experience.
- Smart configuration of your shipping platform strengthens delivery performance, reduces enquiries and supports your brand promise.
- In this article, you’ll learn how a reliability‑first shipping setup improves satisfaction, protects margins and supports sustainable growth.
Shipping platforms can be a powerful tool to manage eCommerce shipping. Some businesses fall into the temptation of optimising for cheapest shipping and find later that the impact on reliability isn’t worth the perceived short-term savings.
When delivery performance dips, customer satisfaction falls, enquiries increase and repeat purchases can decline – costing you more in the long run.
How eCommerce shipping platforms can impact customer experience
Shipping platforms use automated carrier allocation rules to determine which carrier fulfils each delivery. If those rules are not reviewed, the system may prioritise cost over performance, negatively impacting delivery experience.
That’s important to keep in mind, because 78% of shoppers say delivery experience is important to them. Nearly 8 in 10 online shoppers say delivery experience affects their satisfaction.1
Three key elements of delivery experience are especially important to your shoppers: speed, reliability and choice.
Speed
- Most online shoppers expect parcel delivery within two to five days.2
- Millennials and Gen Xs have the highest expectations: one in two want delivery within three days.2
- One in four Gen Z, Millennial and Gen X shoppers say fast delivery is the ideal feature of future delivery experience.2
Reliability
- 85% of shoppers say a reliable delivery experience will be the most important factor in trusting online retailers over the next five years.3
- 45% of shoppers actively track their parcels, with more than two-thirds heading to the delivery provider for this information.3
Choice
- 56% of Gen Zs and 45% of Millennials would switch retailers to access out-of-home collection points.2
- Gen Z and Millennials have the strongest willingness to pay for next-day delivery.2
- Self-service redirection empowers customers to change the parcel destination while it’s on the way.
The hidden cost of cheapest-carrier logic
Lower, unpredictable or inconsistent DIFOT
Cheaper carriers can often have lower or unpredictable DIFOT (delivery in full on time) which measures whether orders arrive complete and within the promised timeframe.
Increased customer enquiries and cost-to-serve
Even small declines in DIFOT can increase customer contact volume. Internal Australia Post analysis shows that a 1% drop in DIFOT can drive an up to 6% increase in contact centre calls.4 These enquiries increase workload, extend response times and reduce margin.
Potential for negative impact on NPS and CLV
Price-only allocation looks attractive – but often increases cost-to-serve and deteriorates Net Promoter Score (NPS), a measure of how likely customers are to recommend your business and Customer Lifetime Value (CLV) a measure of the revenue each customer delivers across their lifetime with your business.
How to configure your shipping platform for reliability
Here’s how to configure your eCommerce shipping platform to prioritise reliability over price alone. If possible, configure your shipping platform before peak periods, so you’re prepared to scale up delivery when needed.
1. Set preferred carrier rules
Override cheapest-carrier defaults by prioritising services with strong reliability performance. Use secondary carriers as fallback options rather than primary routing choices.
2. Apply postcode-based allocation
Different carriers perform differently across metro, regional and remote areas. Configure rules to match carrier strengths by zone.
3. Map service levels accurately
Ensure standard and express options reflect achievable delivery timeframes. Align customer promises with carrier performance and keep your customers updated if delivery performance changes.
4. Automate tracking notifications
Enable automated tracking updates to improve transparency and reduce WISMO (where is my order?) enquiries. Remind customers they can use carrier tools like the Australia Post app to monitor and redirect their parcels.
5. Use product-level rules where appropriate
Apply signature requirements or premium services for high-value or fragile products to reduce delivery failures.
6. Monitor and adjust
Track DIFOT, customer complaints and enquiry volume regularly. Adjust carrier allocation rules when performance trends change.
Reliable delivery supports growth
An exceptional delivery experience creates competitive advantage for your brand. Shipping configuration is not just an operational task – it’s a lever that protects both margin and reputation. Start with this checklist to ensure your shipping platform settings reflect your brand promise.
Reliability-first eCommerce shipping platform configuration checklist
Taking the time to review shipping platform logic can have a significant impact on delivery experience, repeat purchase rate and your bottom line. Start with these eight steps.
- Review whether your platform defaults to the cheapest carrier.
- Set preferred carriers based on reliability performance data.
- Apply postcode-based routing rules for metro, regional and remote zones.
- Ensure delivery promises match actual service performance.
- Enable automated tracking notifications.
- Monitor DIFOT monthly and investigate declines.
- Track WISMO enquiry volume and adjust rules if it increases.
- Review carrier performance before peak periods.
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1 Australia Post eCommerce Report
2 Australia Post eCommerce Market Survey, Oct24 and Nov24
3 Trends Shaping the Future of eCommerce, McCrindle Research for Australia Post, Jan 2025
4 Australia Post internal Contact Centre and DIFOT analysis. In October 2025 a 1% drop in DIFOT resulted in an estimated 25,055 additional cases, equating to a 5.94% increase in average case volume