Week #6 reading focuses on the IT in Supply Chain Management. Also, in
last week the RFID technology grabbed my attention. Supply chain management has
never been more challenging today where companies have to be proactive and
constantly develop plans to eliminate disruptions from their supply chain. The success
of an organization lies in fulfilling customer demand regardless of the situation.
This has pose great challenge in front of companies to keep up the demand in
variable conditions and survive in the competitive market. However, the strategic application
of RFID technology to business problems and leveraging its data has the
potential to optimize critical processes, enhance business intelligence, and improve
collaboration across industries.
RFID is a Radio Frequency Identification
Method used for automatic identification. The RFID environment consists of four
elements: RFID chips that contain portable memory and are attached to objects;
RFID readers that read the chips; RFID middle-ware that coordinates many RFID
readers; and Applications that uses RFID data and are needed to perform
functions such as tracking inventory and placing orders. When an RFID tag passes
through the field of the RFID reader, it detects the activation signal. That
"wakes up" the RFID chip, and it transmits the information on its
microchip to be picked up by the reader. RFID
has wide applications: Scanning more than one object at a time; tracking
shipment and inventory management of parts, devices and containers; Tracing products
and help reduce cost of production failures; Metadata Management and Label
Management to improve the overall efficiency of the supply chain process.
In 2001, the Airbus Company, the biggest
aircraft manufacturer in Europe, spearheaded the "Sup@irworld"
program to enhance their delivery punctuality, quality management as well as to
reduce their inventories for better buying process coordination. Air bus
introduced RFID-technology to increase their overall supply chain transparency
and visibility to improve general reactivity. Air bus’s roll out with of RFID
had three phases; First phase of supply chain logistics and distribution, which
focuses on tracking supplies and reusable shipping containers through supply
chain to warehouse and assembly facilities; second phase focuses on Airbus’s
global transport, manufacturing and assembly operations such as tracking aircraft
parts across manufacturing facilities, automating work order confirmation;
Third phase extends RFID into in-service and support operations. Thus, RFID enabled
Airbus to gain Visibility, Process benefits and Business benefits.
RFID is proven to be one of the best
technologies, which can be used the supply chain management. However, the
initial setup cost is too high to incorporate it in any industry along with
establishing justifiable ROI. Changing to RFID infrastructure includes not only
the tags, but also the learning curve, labor costs, software and systems
integration costs, process redesign and organizational impacts. Several experts
say that RFID is a costly solution that still lacks standardization. It can be
very challenging to manage multiple readers and hardware, especially across
many facilities. Environmental factor is also major issue. So it is still a
question whether RFID would dominate SCM area? I think, what is needed is the
initiation of the learning process to determine how the technology can bring
about business improvements and how a reasonable ROI can be achieved with RFID
References:
- http://www.tegoinc.com/pdfs/news/airbuscasestudy0310.pdf
- http://www.vilant.com/wp-content/themes/vilant2013/img/SupplyChain-banner.jpg
- http://www.isb.edu/isbinsight/Insight_June07/ISBInsight_June2007.pdf
- http://www.iasms.in/pdf/nationalseminar.pdf
- Radio Frequency Identification by Austin Rutkowski, Naomi Shaw, Jenelle Meeker, and Maggie Kwong
Nice article. I liked the concept of RFID in SCM.
ReplyDeleteThank you! I still wonder how the RFID in form of dust particles are tracked. When Prof. Zak told about this dust RFID concept, it's just still there in my brain...
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