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1 Fall 2007 Business Issues RFID: Business Issues Operations & Decision Technologies Department Kelley School of Business Indiana University
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1 Fall 2007Business Issues RFID: Business Issues Operations & Decision Technologies Department Kelley School of Business Indiana University.

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Page 1: 1 Fall 2007Business Issues RFID: Business Issues Operations & Decision Technologies Department Kelley School of Business Indiana University.

1Fall 2007 Business Issues

RFID: Business Issues

Operations & Decision TechnologiesDepartment

Kelley School of Business Indiana University

Page 2: 1 Fall 2007Business Issues RFID: Business Issues Operations & Decision Technologies Department Kelley School of Business Indiana University.

222Fall 2007 RFID – Business Issues

What is RFID?

• RFID stands for Radio Frequency Identification

• It is a technology that permits contact-free transfer of data using a radio frequency transmission

• The heart of RFID technology is a transponder, which is a silicon chip attached to an antenna. It is called a tag. The tag can be attached to items that are to be tracked

• A numeric code is stored on the chip. This code is called the electronic product code (EPC)

• The code is read when communication takes place between a reader (interrogator) and the tag

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333Fall 2007 RFID – Business Issues

RFID Technology is Not New!!

• Tracking livestock (Approximately 15 years)

• Contactless payments (Approximately 5 years)

ExxonMobil Speedpass

Tollbooth lanes

• Event access (Ticketing)

• Building access control

• Has been used in manufacturing to track large components such as engines and chassis

• Has been used for the international postal system for monitoring the quality of service

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Some Existing RFID Applications

• Toyota and Lexus – Keyless cars

• Marks and Spencer – Fresh Food Tracking: Reduce costs of tracking some 4 million trays of chilled foods

• Metro Group – Rolling out RFID at 250 stores and 10 warehouses with 100 suppliers

• pH Europe – Tracks its fleet of rental containers and pallets using active tags

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555Fall 2007 RFID – Business Issues

An Antenna Tunnel

Verification Verification tunnel readstunnel readsVerification Verification tunnel readstunnel readsAntennasAntennasAntennasAntennas

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666Fall 2007 RFID – Business Issues

Some Existing RFID Applications

• Parcelforce Worldwide – Use RFID to position trucks at loading bays. Cut time from gate to loading bay at depot by 14 minutes (15 minutes to 1 minute)

• Goldwin Sportswear – Skiwear tracking in manufacturing and distribution

• Xerox – Uses an RFID system to ship approximately 250,000 copiers in Europe

• Timekeeping at European motor rallies

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Why RFID Now?

• The creation of the Electronic Product Code (EPC)

• Technology changes

• The price of the tags has been coming down. However, price is still an issue

• Mandates by various organizations (European Parliament, DOD, Wal-Mart, Target, etc.)

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888Fall 2007 RFID – Business Issues

The Wal-Mart Mandate

• Wal-Mart required its top 100 suppliers to be RFID-enabled at the case and pallet level by January 2005

• The rest of its suppliers were expected to compliant by December 2006

• Wal-Mart did not endorse specific RFID hardware or software

• Expected suppliers to perform their own tests of RFID technologies

• Will impact 10,000+ Suppliers

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The DOD Mandate

• Department of Defense required its top 100 suppliers to be RFID-compliant by January 2005 for cases, pallets and packaging of items

• Its top 500 suppliers had to be RFID-compliant by July 2005 for cases, pallets and packaging of items

• The remaining suppliers had to be RFID-compliant by January 2006 for cases, pallets and packaging of items

• Tags should be EPC compliant

• Will impact approximately 43,000 suppliers

Page 10: 1 Fall 2007Business Issues RFID: Business Issues Operations & Decision Technologies Department Kelley School of Business Indiana University.

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Key Drivers

• Mandates by Various Organizations

Wal-Mart

Target

U.S. Department of Defense

FDA Counterfeit Drug Task Force

Healthcare Distribution Management Association

• Cost of the tags

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Impact on Business

• Distribution and Logistics – Track items throughout the supply chain

• Demand Planning – The adaptive approach

• Manufacturing – Leaner production and better inventory management

• Packaging/Labeling

• Security – Product authentication and anti-theft

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Likely Impact on Retail

• Better and more efficient tracking of items through the store

• Lower warehouse management costs

• Improved inventory systems. Better shelf inventory visibility – Smart shelves and systems will give advanced notification as soon as stocks run low

• Fewer out-of-stock situations - Higher availability of goods

• Systems will automatically register best-before date near expiry

• Tracking of high-priced items such as batteries, razors, CDs, and computer games

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131313Fall 2007 RFID – Business Issues

Likely Impact on Retail

• Location of the product – Promotional display or shelf

• More point-of-sale data than currently available through bar codes

• Market to the individual consumer

• Smart Carts that will enable marketing based on early purchases

• More product information available to the retailer and the customer

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Some Cost Saving Projections

• 10-20% improvement in demand planning forecast accuracy

• 2-10% increase in sales from fewer out-of-stock items

• 10-30% decrease in inventory due to reduced safety stocks

• 10-30% reduction in labor costs at distribution centers or warehouses

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Likely Benefits for Retail Partners

• RFID will enable all partners in the supply chain to keep track of the entire supply chain

• Partners will be able to handle incoming and outgoing goods faster and easily

• Partners are always up to date on inventories and the location of merchandise

• Inventory can be replenished in time and merchandise can be reordered more accurately

• Fewer merchandise will be written off

• RFID serves to protect merchandise against theft

• Time-consuming inventory counts can be eliminated

• Better efficiency of merchandise distribution within the store

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Metro’s RFID Motivation

• Reducing Shrinkage in the Supply Chain. The retail industry estimates that supply chain shrinkage runs at about 2% of sales worldwide. In the US it runs around 1.3% or $26 Billion a year. Analysis shows this can be reduced by 25% if tags used at the case level and 40% if tags used at the item level

• Improving On-Shelf Availability and Reducing Out-of-Stocks. Out-of-Stocks run at between 6% and 10% in grocery retailing and higher in fashion retailing. GMA estimates that approximately 25% of stock-outs are because of misplaced items.

• Productivity and Labor Efficiencies. It takes approximately 6 seconds to do a barcode reading. Surveys show that RFID can improve on that.

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Supermarket of the Future

• The word “sold out” will be a thing of the past. Smart shelves will automatically register whenever stocks of a product are near depletion

• Special terminals will provide product information and source of products. For example, you will be able to find out exactly the route taken by the steak you are contemplating buying from the farm to the counter

• Intelligent home appliances like refrigerators will communicate directly with the supermarket to determine what the consumer needs to purchase

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Key RFID Issues: Business Implications

• What is the business case for the implementation?

• What is the ROI for an RFID implementation?

• What are the business drivers for RFID?

• Which customers are going to mandate RFID usage?

• What is being mandated?

• What will the implementation model be?

• How will processes be managed for mandating customers versus others?

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Key RFID Issues: Technology

• Global Standards – Role of EPCGlobal

• Availability of RFID equipment

• IT Infrastructure to handle the large amounts of data

• Interoperability of RFID equipment throughout the supply chain

• Interaction with Enterprise Systems

• Is RFID technology here to stay? What is the life time of the current systems? How will changing technologies impact new customers?

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Key RFID Issues: Costs

• Current costs of tags and RFID systems

• The item level problem – high costs versus potentially high benefits

• Who bears the cost, particularly in the supply chain?

• How will costs be spread – across customers mandating technology or across all customers?

• Fixed versus variable costs for new customers

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Key Business Concerns: Across all Businesses

• Standards and technology

• Changing technology

• Limited full scale reference deployments

• The item level problem – high costs versus potentially high benefits

• Availability of RFID systems

• Current costs of tags and systems

• IT Infrastructure to handle the large amounts of data

• Interoperability throughout the supply chain

• Who bears the cost, particularly in the supply chain?

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Key Business Concerns: For Individual Businesses

• Which customers are going to mandate RFID usage? What is being mandated?

• How will the costs be spread – across customers mandating technology or across all customers?

• What will the implementation model be?

• How will processes be managed for mandating customers versus others?

• Fixed versus variable costs for new customers

• Is this technology here to stay? What is the life time of the current systems? How will this impact new customers?

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Identifying the Hurdles

• The Business Case: The key hurdle for most RFID deployments will be coming up with a business case to support the required investment

• For a large consumer products manufacturer, AMR Research estimates that a fully integrated RFID deployment could cost between $13 million and $24 million.

• Companies complying with a mandate can expect to invest from $1 million to $3 million

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Identifying the Hurdles

• Technical Hurdles:

RFID tag readability not 100%

Technology infrastructure will be too cumbersome

Enterprise systems not designed for high data volumes likely to be generated by RFID systems

RFID system speed does not match either warehouse speed or production speed

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Identifying the Benefits

• Inventory Management

More accurate shipments to customers?

Streamline Receiving/Shipping/Invoicing?

Streamline labor utilization?

Better record keeping?

• Order Management

Higher order fill rates?

Easier returns/recalls?

• Collaborative Planning

Increased demand planning accuracy?

Better upstream data from customers/partners?

Reduced safety stocks and shorter lead times?

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Strategic Implementation Roadmap

• Phase I: The Wait and See Phase

No use of RFID technologies

Wait and see approach

• Phase II: The Compliance Phase

Compliance required by customer

No internal use of RFID

• Phase III: The Ramp-Up Phase

Limited applications internally

Mainly containers and pallets tagging

Passive tags

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Strategic Implementation Roadmap

• Phase IV: The Supply Chain Visibility Phase

SKU tracking through out the distribution channels

Case and pallet tagging

Passive tags

• Phase V: The Advantage Creation Phase

Customized applications

Active tags with Read/Write capabilities

Item level tagging

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Key Business Issues

• Business case development

• RFID technologies and systems

• IT infrastructure issues

• Enterprise system issues

• Data warehousing

• Leveraging the data

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RFID Costs

• Hardware Costs

Tags ($0.25 to $0.80 per tag)

Readers ($150 to $10,000+ per reader)

Antennas ($25 to $500+ per antenna)

Controller PC ($1000 to $4000+)

Cabling (Approximately $10/foot)

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RFID Costs

• Hardware installation costs: Significant

• Fine-tuning costs: Medium

• Software costs: Significant

• Process changes: Medium

• Integration costs: Very High

• Maintenance: Medium

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Today’s Supply Chain

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Designing the Supply Chain of the Future

Manufacturing Packaging Manufacturer’s Warehouse

TransportationCustomer Distribution Center

Store Backroom

Store Shelf

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The EPC Network

• A clear view into the supply chain

• Show where all the products are …

• How much a company has …

• Where it is…

• Where it needs to be…

• And when/where it goes missing.

Manufacturing Packaging Manufacturer’s Warehouse

TransportationCustomer Distribution Center

Store Backroom

Store Shelf

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353535Fall 2007 RFID – Business Issues

Questions to ask a Business

• Does your business have an RFID strategy?

• Are you considering RFID as a enabler in your business?

• Have you identified an approach for getting started with RFID?

• What are the business drivers for considering an RFID implementation at your company?

• Are the RFID business drivers from an internal project or one of a partner (vendor or customer)?

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Questions to ask a Business

• What processes have you considered enabling with RFID technology?

• Will you use RFID to track product or fixed assets?

• How do you perceive your current product identification processes will be affected?

• How do you think the data collection environment will change at your company?

• What customers (internal and external) will this technology serve?

• Are you looking for opportunities to demand RFID compliance from your suppliers?