They're all related to how they're handled at the DC, there's a bunch of them, so here it goes [cracks knuckles]:
-Anything 'Flow' means it goes straight from being received to being loaded on an outbound trailer. Everything else comes from warehouse reserve (similar to store-side backstock)
-Conveyable means it can ride on our conveyors. Non-conveyable can't due to various reasons; too long, weird shape, bagged goods, easily damaged, too small, etc.
-Teamlift is a special designation for noncon that's over 60 lbs in weight.
-HV (High Velocity) is also known as priority. Means that once we get the label drops for those, it take precedent to get it out to the store.
-Breakpack is a label you guys really shouldn't see, but it's for the cartons that get opened to fill the repacks.
-PIPO is pallet in, pallet out. Full pallets that are left intact from vendor to store.
-FPS, I can't remember what it stands for, but are full pallets of conveyable that are normally broken down at depal, but since it all goes to one store, they just send as an FPS pallet instead.
-Non-Merch is your ISM, fixtures and store order stuff. Top priority above everything else, as it has a deadline of 8 hrs from being received to being loaded in outbound.
-Audit, another one you shouldn't see, but it means that we at the DC need to scan the UPCs to verify quantities, inner counts, UPC/DPCI, etc.
I think that's all of them. As for the stuff in the upper left portion of the label, where it say '580 conv ca' in HLM's post up top, is for labels coming from those picking in warehouse. The number is your DC#, the next designation is where it's conveyable or non-con, and the next designation is whether a guy in an order picker got it (cartonnaire CA) or it came from a full pallet (FP) pulled by a reach truck and broken down in depal. Hope that helps.