During a business visit to Japan in the summer of 2013, I
happened to walk into a retailing store, Uni Qlo, in the Ginza shopping
district in central Tokyo. Unlike what you would imagine, the store was 12 floors high and
spanned about 5000 square meters. It was gigantic! After strolling through the
store for about an hour, I was struck by the fact that, though it was a peak-shopping
season, I did not find a single shelf that was empty, or running low on
clothes. That store would have had at any given point in time over hundreds of
thousands of stock keeping units (SKUs). Taking a physical inventory of this is
almost humanly not possible. But they seemed to do it pretty well. How?
Like Uni Qlo, a lot of retail merchandizers are automating
their inventory management systems that require little to no interruptions from
humans. The Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology is leading this
transformation in many industries like retailing. RFID tags are intelligent
barcodes that are attached to the SKUs and can communicate over a centralized network through radio frequency waves, to identify the
product. RFID tags help in tracking a product at every stage of its lifecycle,
from the time it is made to the time it is taken off the shelves.
Typical barcodes that we find on most products today require
a physical scan, again involving a human element. RFID eliminates this
additional time it requires to scan and also reduces the chances of human error
and rework. Apart from these obvious advantages, RFID technology can aid
inventory management systems across industries in many ways. Lets look at a few
of them in detail.
1.
Categorizing Inventory – The use of RFID can
greatly improve categorization of inventory. For example products can be easily
classified as pipeline, safety or anticipation inventory. The progress of each
SKU through the supply chain can be easily tracked through a central monitoring
system.
2.
Calculating safety stock levels – As the
information about stock levels are continuously fed to the central system by
RFID antennas, if the inventory drops below a certain level (reorder point),
the buffer inventory can raise an alarm and system can be automatically
programmed to place new order of stock for replenishment. This activity can be
a proactive system too in which the system can regularly poll the inventory
levels (continuous review) and can take action even before the safety levels
are reached.
3.
Improving demand visibility – Another major
advantage of RFID tags over traditional bar coding system is that RFID is a
“read/write” system. The supply chain policy put into place by the company can
be actively re-written to the RFID tags, which can accommodate anticipation
inventory caused due to variability in consumer demand. This can also reduce
the magnitude of the ‘bullwhip effect’ that is caused by change in consumer
preferences, which can adversely affect inventory supplies throughout the
various stages of the supply chain.
4.
Tracking inventory – With the use of RFID,
suppliers and retailers can easily track the progress and exact location of any
particular SKU and read/write data onto the tag without having to be in the
physical proximity of that SKU.
These are just a few ways in which RFID technology can
transform traditional inventory management systems. Though this technology has
been around for more than a decade now, it’s potential has not yet been fully
recognized. In a survey conducted by the National Retail Federation, as of
2011, only about 9% of the surveyed retailers had implemented RFID. But this is changing quickly. The awareness about RFID is spreading fast. By 2017, RFID
related hardware and services are expected to grow to a $70.5 billion market. The
potential that RFID possesses is immense and what it can achieve, only time
will tell.
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