Terms
Last updated: 1 July 2026
Notice. These Terms reflect the current website structure and service information for Lois Davidson Consulting. Client engagements should be governed by a separate written proposal, statement of work, or service agreement.
Business identity
Public brand: Lois Davidson Consulting
Registered business name: Lois Davidson Consulting and Services
Responsible person: Lois Edzii Davidson
Email: info@loisdavidsonconsulting.com
Use of the website
The website provides information about digital commerce consulting and global procurement support. Website content is provided for general business information and does not create a consulting engagement by itself.
Enquiries and consultations
Submitting a form or booking a consultation does not guarantee that Lois Davidson Consulting can accept a project. Scope, pricing, responsibilities, timelines, and deliverables should be agreed separately in writing.
No legal, tax, or engineering advice
Website content does not provide legal, tax, customs, logistics, engineering, safety, or technical certification advice. Specialist advice may be required depending on the project.
Procurement support
Procurement support may include supplier communication, RFQ coordination, quotation comparison, documentation review, and status reporting. The client remains responsible for purchase decisions unless a separate written agreement states otherwise.
Digital commerce support
Digital commerce support may include diagnosis and support for Shopify and Meta infrastructure. Platform decisions, account reviews, policy outcomes, and third party platform actions remain controlled by the relevant platforms.
Intellectual property
Website text, structure, documents, frameworks, and visual materials are owned by Lois Davidson Consulting unless otherwise stated.
Limitation of liability
Liability terms should be set out in the relevant client agreement for each paid engagement. Nothing on this website is intended to exclude liability where exclusion is not permitted by law.
Governing law
The law and jurisdiction for any paid client engagement should be stated in the relevant proposal, statement of work, or service agreement.