
RFID: A Balanced
Perspective
by
David C. Allais
With so much
publicity surrounding radio frequency
identification (RFID), you may wonder how it
will impact your business, if at all. Like
any new emerging technology it’s important
to get perspective on what may or may not be
relevant for your operation and not be
caught up in the wave of propaganda.
An RFID tag is
simply a microchip attached to an antenna.
This RFID tag is a data carrier analogous to
a printed bar code or to the magnetic stripe
on your credit card. Unlike bar codes, RFID
does not require a line of sight because
tags are read by radio waves rather than by
reflected light.
From its
beginning in the 1970s, RFID has established
its value in a broad range of applications
including toll collection from moving
vehicles, access control, theft prevention
(automobiles and retail merchandise),
tracking cargo containers, managing
returnable assets such as beer kegs and
monitoring manufacturing work-in-process.
The catch-all
term RFID embraces considerable variety
including active or passive tags, read-only
or read-write, and four widely separated
radio frequencies. Tags can range in size
from tiny capsules for injection under an
animal’s skin to large active tags for
fast-moving rail cars. The distance at which
an RFID tag can be read depends on tag type,
antenna configuration and RF power. The
smallest passive tags require near contact
while larger active tags may be read from a
distance of over 100 feet.
RFID in
logistics and retail
In 1999, the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (MIT) solicited financial support
from major corporations for research into
future technology applicable to logistics
and retail.
The MIT Auto
ID Center conducted the research and
developed the concept of “The Integrated
Item Intelligent World.” The group envisions
that, in time, every manufactured item will
carry a unique RFID tag. Because the tags
are unique, each serialized item can be
tracked from the point of manufacture,
through distribution, within the retail
store, and finally to the consumer. The MIT
group also proposed a hierarchy of database
servers communicating through the Internet
to manage and provide access to the vast
amount of information collected from RFID
tags.
Wal-Mart has
assumed a dominant role in accelerating the
MIT concepts. Initially, Wal-Mart intended
to have its suppliers place RFID tags
directly on retail items, but has since
backed off to require only the tagging of
pallets and cartons. As of a Jan. 1, 2005
deadline, Wal-Mart’s 100 largest suppliers
are tagging shipments to three of its Texas
distribution centers. Target Corporation and
other major retailers have announced their
own RFID initiatives.
The MIT
project was handed off to EPCglobal, an
organization affiliated with the Uniform
Code Council, a not-for-profit standards
organization that manages UPC bar codes and
numbering. EPC stands for Electronic Product
Code and embraces a specific set of RFID
specifications and data structures for use
in the retail supply chain.
Independently,
but sharing characteristics with EPC, the
U.S. Department of Defense is developing its
own RFID standards, and DOD suppliers are
being required to apply RFID tags to goods
shipped to military warehouses.
A recent
Google search of “RFID” produced 6,940,000
hits. Recent articles featuring RFID have
appeared in the Wall Street Journal,
Business Week, Fortune, Forbes, Information
Week, Computerworld and Modern Materials
Handling. Leading bar code equipment
suppliers, system integrators and
consultants eager to sell RFID products (RFID
terminals, tag printers, individual tags,
etc.) and services have joined the
promotional frenzy.
Reservations and concerns
The MIT group projected that the cost of
an RFID tag will drop to five cents in
several years. Currently, each EPC tag costs
between 20 cents and 80 cents depending on
quantity and sub-type. In contrast, bar
codes range from free (if part of a
pre-printed package) to as much as 2 cents
for a large adhesive label. Tag cost is the
most often cited impediment to the rapid
deployment of RFID.
Wal-Mart has
said it will not pay for the cost of RFID
tagging, but rather that suppliers should
search for internal operational benefits to
obtain a return on investment. “Many
suppliers to Wal-Mart and The Department of
Defense have privately complained that RFID
is an added expense with no foreseeable
return on investment,” says Steve Halliday,
a consultant with High Tech Aid (www.hightechaid.com).
As a consequence, most suppliers that must
tag shipments have adopted a free-standing
slap and ship technique.
There are more
subtle and basic reservations about RFID
than the cost of tags, equipment and labor.
One client of the Gartner Group (a respected
business consultancy), considered to be a
“best-in-class bar code user” spent
considerable time and money piloting RFID
technology since the mid-1990s, long before
the current hype began. According to
Gartner, “This organization has tested RFID
in almost every process in its business. It
has concluded that there is nothing it can
do with RFID that it can’t do faster, and
more accurately, with bar coding. It
concluded that, for its processes, even if
RFID costs the same as bar coding, bar code
would still be the superior technology. This
doesn’t have anything to do with the cost or
maturity of the technology – it involves the
suitability of RFID for different data
collection processes.”
Linda Dillman,
a Wal-Mart vice president, was asked in a
mid-2004 interview why Wal-Mart is working
with such an experimental technology. She
responded, “Because we’re not afraid to test
things. Wal-Mart believes that, if it is to
stay on the leading edge of logistics and
technology, it needs to try technologies
that will fail, and the company has no
problem with that.” On the other hand, while
the Gartner Group believes RFID has
significant long-term potential, it has
warned its clients to “prepare for
disillusionment.”
There are
excellent, effective applications for RFID.
Will its application to inventory flowing
through the supply chain become one of
these? If so, how soon? The jury is still
out.
How will
RFID impact the industrial distributor?
In the near term, the most likely
requirement for RFID will come from one of
your customers. If you are selling to the
Department of Defense, you may be required
to affix either an EPC or Unique
Identification Number (UID) RFID tag to each
carton. Similarly, if one of your customers
is a major retailer, you may need to attach
EPC tags. These customer mandates involve
applying the RFID tag, verifying that the
applied tag can be read, and transmitting
associated data to your customer via EDI,
XML or other specified methodology.
When the need
arises to tag shipments to a customer, you
could turn to companies that are eager to
sell you tags and equipment or consultants
who peddle advice. However, I would suggest
first contacting your warehouse management
system provider (if you have one) or the
provider of your enterprise software if you
do not. These system partners can evaluate
your customer’s RFID requirement and propose
a cost-effective solution integrated with
your warehouse and shipping systems.
For some
industrial distributors, there may be good
niche applications for RFID where bar code
does not provide the best solution. Consider
returnable pallets, totes, containers, or
reels on which a bar code label would be
subject to handling damage or environmental
degradation. Another application might be
where valuable tools in a rental or
consignment pool are subject to grease, dirt
or abrasion. Again, for these potentially
beneficial niche applications, I suggest
contacting your regular system provider.
As to the
broader question of when RFID may be
suitable for mainstream inventory tracking
in industrial distribution, we may reflect
on the history of bar coding. The adoption
of the UPC bar code standard by grocery
retailers in April 1973 set the stage for
broad usage. A good 10 years elapsed before
a critical mass of supermarkets was scanning
these bar codes and some more years before
UPC was used by other types of retail
establishments. In 1982, the Department of
Defense began requiring its suppliers to
apply bar codes. Similarly, in 1984 the
Automotive Industry Action Group
standardized the bar code and label formats
required of automotive component suppliers.
These non-retail initiatives forced the
spread of bar code beyond the retail store.
It wasn’t
until the early 1990s, 20 years after UPC
was born, that operational use of bar code
in industrial distribution began to provide
an acceptable return on investment. Will
RFID become justified for primary warehouse
tasks of the industrial distributor by 2025?
The answer depends on how slowly or how
quickly RFID becomes effective in the mass
market retail supply chain. c
David C. Allais, Ph.D, is founder and
president of PathGuide Technologies Inc., a
privately held software developer
specializing in real-time warehouse
management systems for wholesale
distributors. An internationally recognized
expert in bar code technology and automatic
identification specifications and standards,
he serves on the GSC committee of the
Uniform Code Council (UCC) and has authored
five bar code symbologies. Reach him at
PathGuide (888) 627-9797 or
davida@pathguide.com.
This
article originally appeared in the March
2005 issue of Progressive Distributor.
Copyright 2005.