By
Alorie Gilbert
Thursday, December 23 2004 11:03 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/communications/0,39044192,39210607,00.htm
Wal-Mart Stores' top merchandise
suppliers are lifting sales of radio frequency identification devices
as they race to comply with a January deadline from the world's largest
retailer.
Major consumer goods companies--including Gillette, Kraft Foods and
Procter & Gamble--have collectively spent about US$250 million on
RFID tags and related equipment this year, according to a new report
from AMR Research. Those companies are among the nearly 140 Wal-Mart
suppliers working toward fulfilling the retailer's RFID directive.
Issued last year, the
directive calls for Wal-Mart's largest suppliers to attach RFID
tracking "tags" on shipments sent to several Dallas-area Wal-Mart
warehouses and stores, beginning next month. The tags, which contain
special microchips, are designed to automatically relay detailed
information about the contents of a package or container to computers.
The technology is expected to reduce much of the manual labor and human
error involved in tracking inventory via bar codes.
"Wal-Mart is single-handedly responsible for moving this industry
along," said Kara Romanow, the AMR analyst who wrote the new study.
Romanow noted that several other major retailers, including Albertsons,
Best Buy, Target and Britain's Tesco, are also launching RFID projects
with their merchandise suppliers. The U.S. Department of Defense and
the Food and Drug Administration are encouraging companies to deploy
the technology, too.
But Wal-Mart appears to be leading the way. The company's project may
more than double the U.S. retail industry's spending on RFID equipment
this year. A forecast from research firm IDC estimates that U.S.
retailers and their suppliers spent just US$90 million or so last year on RFID technology.
The main beneficiaries of the RFID shopping spree are hardware suppliers, including Intermec Technologies, Matrics (a division of Symbol Technologies) and Alien Technology,
Romanow said. Consultants and software companies, including
Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Microsoft, Sun Microsystems and SAP, are also
looking for a slice of the action.
Yet this year's outlays will be just "a drop in the bucket" compared
with likely future spending, given that other retailers are ramping up
their deployments and Wal-Mart is expanding the scope of its
initiative, Romanow said. Wal-Mart is said to be budgeting about US$3 billion for RFID over the next several years.
In addition, it will cost merchandise suppliers about 10 times what
they've already spent to get the full benefit of the technology,
Romanow said.
"They decided to do the bare minimum to get compliant," she said. "So
there's a huge opportunity for creating more business impact and a lot
more spending."