Accenture Item Level RFID 2012 Report
Accenture Item Level RFID 2012 Report
A Competitive Differentiator
The VICS boards decision to adopt the guidelines for tag placement and performance and serialization gives a strong signal to the industry that all trading partners need to move beyond limited trials and consider full fledged rollouts of RFID systems at the item level. GS1 EPC standards, which enable companies to identify, capture and share information to deliver real time visibility into inventory and business processes. GS1 EPC standards increase visibility and efficiency throughout the supply chain and improve quality information flow between companies and their key trading partners. VICS has also endorsed the use of GS1 Keys, Barcode Data Capture standards and other GS1 technical standards, including VICS EDI.
Bloomingdales branch in Manhattans SoHo district achieved inventory accuracy of 95 percent. Sales rose and inventory shrink rates dipped.3 German fashion retailer Gerry Weber now carries an RFID tag on roughly 20% of its stock. Woven right into the clothing care label, the tags are giving Weber better delivery control of logistics providers, because deliveries and returns can be sped up. Inventory can be tallied very quickly with little or no error.4 As noted earlier in this report, RFID readers do not need to make physical contact with the product, which means retailers can take a store inventory using RFID technology much faster than with barcodes.
Executives Weigh In
Retailers who have utilized itemlevel RFID say it has reduced their need for inventory adjustments, cut transportation costs, and increased sales. As they had predicted, retailers associate the benefits of item-level RFID mainly with better visibility to inventory. Not only does this new visibility improve execution within the four walls of the store, leading to increased unit sales and better full price sell-through, it also helps them satisfy customer demand more effectively. Over half of the suppliers surveyed have implemented or piloted itemlevel RFID. Nearly 40% of them have piloted with three or more retailers, and several have even worked with seven or more retailers a statistic we read as a clear indicator of momentum. (Reference Figure 1) Suppliers who have tried RFID arent suffering from buyers remorse. They say they had anticipated better inventory management, loss prevention, and better distribution management as the most important results of implementing RFID, and found the technology has largely delivered. Suppliers also found other benefits they had not anticipated, including savings on transportation costs and deeper customer insights. Suppliers who have not implemented still believe it will work. While concerns abound among suppliers who have not implemented the technology, skepticism of its benefits is not a reason they have not tried RFID. Most who havent tried RFID yet are preoccupied with other priorities or dont feel the timing is right.
Figure 1 Suppliers Who Have Implemented item-level RFID How many retailers have you piloted item-level RFID with?
13.3%
26.7%
60.0%
Most surveys suggest that retailers lose 4-8% of sales For all the advantages in total on stockouts, not including supply chain visibility RFID the opportunity cost of can create, building a business disappointed customers case for the technology has who leave the store without not been easy. Ironically, buying anything else. the fact that advantages Working back from that are so widely distributed figure, the math becomes throughout the supply very simple: if the total chain makes it difficult to narrow down the net present variable cost of tagging each item is 20 cents (cost of value of RFID adoption. tag materials + labor) and Accenture suggests a simpler average unit margin in a way to begin thinking category is $5, the category about the shared supplier/ would need a 4% sales retailer opportunity in any lift to break even on RFID. given category is to work Anything above that sales back from the one that lift generates a positive ROI. gets everyones attention: Unlike the other additional increased sales. Recent benefits harvested in the item-level RFID pilots have value chain, the gains to be proven that the technology found reducing stockouts is having a big impact in reducing stockouts and related are shared by suppliers and retailers alike and missed sales opportunities. relatively easy to agree on.
Total Tag Cost
$0.30 $0.30 $0.30 $0.30 $0.30 $0.20 $0.20 $0.20 $0.20 $0.20 $0.10 $0.10 $0.10 $0.10 $0.10 5
Other factors such as distribution efficiency, customer insight, reduced labor, or loss prevention will sweeten the total pie but arent likely to drive adoption of RFID in a given category for the first time. Of course, any business investment of importance requires a more rigorous business case, but this backof-the-envelope calculation is a good way to help suppliers and retailers quickly target the areas where they are likely to find a shared opportunity.
Figure 2 - Market Adoption and Tag Pricing Tag Price Reduction 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35%
Annual Decrease Cumulative
2008
2009 6.7%
2010
2011 4.5%
2012 2.5%
21.4%
26.7%
30.0% 33.3%
Looking Ahead
After a decade of spotty pilots and false starts, RFID has finally found a permanent home at a number of North Americas leading clothing retailers. In the near term, this survey suggests that retailer requests will continue to be the primary driver of adoption within the Department Store and Mass Merchandise sectors. Of the suppliers who responded to our survey who have implemented a pilot, 80% say they did so at a customers request. (Reference Figure 3) But suppliers ---- especially those who produce rapidly replenished merchandise such as denim, underwear, foundations, t-shirts and footwear ---- will soon begin to play a role in increasing momentum as well. Some of these suppliers have reached an internal tipping point and are already considering tagging entire product lines. In several cases, suppliers have taken the lead in initiating pilots with hesitant retailers. As more and more retailers adopt RFID, and as retailers currently using RFID broaden their rollouts to additional merchandise categories, it will become clear to suppliers that broad industrywide adoption is now under way. Many more suppliers will quickly reach their own internal tipping points. Within the Department Store channel, broad adoption in categories with high replenishment will be followed by a similar proliferation in categories with fashion and seasonal merchandise. If this occurs, it will be in line with what has been generally observed of innovation in almost every field. For at least 100 years, scholars have observed that innovations tend to be adopted along an S-curve that rises sharply once a number of factors fall into place, including the experience of a number of successful early adopters, falling costs of adoption, and the degree to which the new technology creates an advantage for the user. The results of this survey suggest that item-level RFID will soon reach just such a point.
Figure 3 Suppliers Who Have Implemented item-level RFID Who initiated the pilot?
6.7% 13.3%
80.0%
Retailer Your own effort Other (please specify)
Appendix
Figure 4 Item-level RFID implementation and plans to expand programs
Have you implemented/piloted item-level RFID within your organization or with any of your trading partners? Retailers that have implemented RFID
Do you have plans to scale your program to include more categories or products beyond where you are today?
22.2% 77.8%
Yes No
48.3%
51.7%
Suppliers that have implemented RFID
Do you have plans to scale your program to include more categories or products beyond where you are today?
Yes No
60.0%
40.0%
Yes No
Figure 6 Benefits from implementing item-level RFID What were the realized benefits of your item-level RFID program? (choose all that apply). Retailers that have implemented RFID Answer Options Improved inventory visibility Reduced lost sales associated with fewer out-of-stocks that result from phantom inventory Improved inventory accuracy Increase the number of perpetual/cycle counts that can be done annually Improved customer insight Increased sales by providing customers with more accurate information on product location Reduced down time during physical inventory Reduced store labor associated with cycle counting inventory and performing adjustments Improved demand forecasting and planning Reduced corp admin labor w/ fewer inventory adjustments and reconciliation Reduced distribution costs Reduced chargebacks Improved margin with fewer end-of-season markdowns that result from un-recognized store inventory Reduced shrink/loss prevention Reduced transportation costs Reduce anti-counterfeit (reduce knock offs) Rank 1 1 3 3 5 6 6 8 9 9 9 9 13 14 14 16
Suppliers that have implemented RFID Answer Options Improved inventory visibility Reduced shrink / loss prevention Improved inventory accuracy Increase the number of perpetual/cycle counts that can be done annually Increased sales by providing customers with more accurate information on product location Reduced down time during physical inventory Reduced lost sales associated with fewer out-of-stocks that result from phantom inventory Improved customer insight Improved demand forecasting and planning Improved margin with fewer end-of-season markdowns that result from un-recognized store inventory Reduced chargebacks Reduced store labor associated with cycle counting inventory and performing adjustments Reduced corporate admin labor w/ fewer inventory adjustments and reconciliation Reduced distribution costs Reduce anti-counterfeit (reduce knock offs) Reduced transportation costs Rank 1 1 3 4 4 4 4 8 9 10 10 10 13 14 15 15
Figure 7 Challenges to implementing item-level RFID What are perceived as the greatest challenges facing your item-level RFID program? (choose all that apply) Retailers that have implemented RFID Answer Options Cost of tagging Trading partner buy-in Executive level buy-in Cost of hardware Cost of software Reliability of systems and data Ownership of the process within the organization Cost of running dual processes (RFID + Barcode) Organizational change/culture dynamic and resistance to change Other Consumer acceptance or education Maturity of the technology Labor union resistance or hurdles Rank 1 1 3 4 5 5 5 8 8 8 9 9 9
Suppliers that have implemented RFID Answer Options Cost of tagging Cost of hardware Reliability of systems and data Cost of software Ownership of the process within the organization Organizational change/culture dynamic and resistance to change Executive level buy-in Trading partner buy-in Consumer acceptance or education Cost of running dual processes (RFID + Barcode) Maturity of the technology Other (please specify) Labor union resistance or hurdles Rank 1 2 3 4 5 5 7 7 7 7 7 7 8
10
Endnotes
1. Miguel Bustillo. July 23, 2010. Walmart Radio Tags to Track Clothing. Wall street Journal. http://online.wsj.com/ article/SB1000142405274870442130457 5383213061198090.html. 2. American Apparel RFID Case Study: The Results. http://www.ibmd.averydennison. com/solutions/american-apparel-rfid.asp 3. Susan Reda. November 2010. Ready (Finally) for Item-Level Deployment. http://www.stores.org/STORES%20 Magazine%20November%20 2010/ready-finally-item-leveldeployment?page=show. 4. Mark Roberti. July 25, 2011. Gerry Weber Shows How Retailers Benefit From RFID. RFID Journal. http://www. rfidjournal.com/article/print/8624.
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