The term "delivery addresses" refers to specific locations to which goods, products, or services are shipped. These addresses may differ from billing addresses and can vary depending on the location of warehouses, branches, or remote offices. In many organizations, managing multiple delivery addresses is common—particularly in decentralized or international structures.
Management of multiple delivery addresses: Create, edit, and delete various delivery addresses per customer or project.
Address verification: Automatic validation of addresses for accuracy and completeness, often using external data sources (e.g., postal code directories).
Assignment to orders: Select a specific delivery address when generating quotes, orders, or delivery notes.
Georeferencing: Determine geographic coordinates for route planning or location analysis.
Import/export functions: Transfer delivery addresses from other systems (e.g., CRM, ERP) or export them for further processing.
Permission control: Restrict which user groups are allowed to create or modify delivery addresses.
Change history: Track who modified a delivery address and when.
A retail company maintains a separate delivery address for each store in its inventory system.
A manufacturing company receives raw materials directly at the specific plant where production is scheduled.
An online retailer allows customers to store multiple delivery addresses—for example, for personal and business shipments.
An international enterprise uses different delivery addresses for warehouses in various countries.
A field service technician receives deliveries directly at the current project construction site.