For Immediate
Release
5 August 2009
RFID in the Fashion
Business
IDTechEx, Cambridge, UK
RFID in the Fashion Business
By Dr Peter Harrop,
Chairman, IDTechEx
When IDTechEx first
published the popular report "Apparel RFID 2009-2019", it
was able to profile 60 brand owners and retailers involved as well as
detailing many uses throughout the apparel supply chain, including
the widespread use of RFID in laundry. In 2009, however, adoption has
accelerated, particularly for brands and retail. Avery Dennison has
landed most of the tag orders in the past and it is involved in the
trial at Harvey Nichols store in London which uses Motorola
interrogators and in other UK retail trials. However, many suppliers
are seeing success in 2009 and the phenomenon is now truly global,
with local system integrators usually involved. For example, US brand
Ralph Lauren is trialling woven RFID tags in its merchandise in China
as an anti-counterfeiting measure. Here are some other examples from
the USA to Europe, Turkey, The Middle East, India and Japan and
including shoes, jewellery, designer wristwatches and other
accessories.
Krause outlet
Krause Outlet stores and sells off-season men's
and women's brand-name fashions that it buys from retailers. That can
mean individual items rather than full sets of all sizes and colors
of a particular garment. In 2009, an RFID system now displays
information regarding each garment in store windows, so shoppers can
use mobile phones to reserve the clothes and then purchase them from
a vending machine, instead of waiting two weeks as in the past.
Customers view articles of clothing on a rotary
rack. As each item reaches the window, the rack stops and turns it
around 180 degrees, and a nearby RFID interrogator reads the passive
high-frequency (HF) tag attached to the garment. The tag's unique ID
number is linked to data regarding the item, as well as its picture,
so related information and the picture is presented on a computer
screen in the store window. To buy or reserve the garment the
customer calls a hotline and punches in the item's four-digit code.
Customers can also buy clothing directly from the vending machine.
About 2000 tags from X-Ident Technology of Germany are used. Readers
and antennas were provided by Feig Electronic.
Charles Vvgele
Charles Vvgele Group
is a major independent European fashion retailer with 851 branches in
Switzerland, Germany, Austria, Belgium, the Netherlands, Slovenia,
Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic. It has 70 million garments
sourced annually from more than 400 suppliers and distributed to 34
consolidation hubs throughout Asia and Europe. In 2009, it was
announced that the company has implemented a Checkpoint Systems
Merchandise Visibility system to RFID-enable its whole supply chain.
The RFID covers point-of-manufacture to point-of-sale, using standard
EPC Gen 2 labels. Paybacks include improvement in inventory
replenishment, reduction of out-of-stocks and better on-hand
inventory. Charles Vvgele can now track and trace individual garments
along its entire supply chain. This capability enables retailers to
reduce logistics errors automatically and it can ensure that its most
popular lines are always in stock and on display.
The company's vice president of supply chain
Thomas Beckmann, said: "Our adoption of RFID has transformed and
improved our operations from source to store. We have begun
streamlining our operations and supporting our sales in ways that
simply were not possible before; in many ways this marks the
beginning of a retail revolution. Our adoption of RFID is
transforming our business and ensuring that our customers find what
they are looking for. In the fast-moving fashion industry, responding
to the expectations of customers is the difference between success
and failure."
Eren Holding
Eren Holding is a diversified conglomerate which manufactures
and distributes high-end garments, with such prestigious brand names
as Lacoste, Burberry, Calvin Klein, Coach and Blank. It operates 88
dedicated fashion retail stores throughout Turkey, and manufactures
and distributes close to two million garments per year. Eren Holding
had a need to enhance its supply chain traceability process and
reduce inventory control/labor costs, so it approached System
supplier Alien Technology, which has completed five similar projects
in Europe to date, and local systems integrator STS for a complete
hardware and Oracle based software solution. STS provided a complete
Oracle based software solution which provides complete traceability
of the tagged articles from the point of manufacture to inventory
control at the retail level.
Ejder
Altiparmak, director of brands at Eren Holding explained, "In
the past, it would take four dedicated personnel more than four hours
to conduct a typical inventory control per store, but now after the
introduction of STS and Alien's RFID item level tagging solution, it
takes only two people about 20 minutes to conduct a complete
inventory check. This increased control over what's on the shelf
greatly reduces out-of-stocks which leads to better sales turnover.
"
Serge Blanco
TAGSYS, the global leader in item-level RFID infrastructure, has
deployed its complete 'RFID for Fashion' solution for French retailer
Serge Blanco to optimize its supply chain and improve item level
tracking from factory, through distribution, to the Point of
Sale.
With over one million items of
clothing moving through the supply chain each year and a growing
business, Serge Blanco was determined to optimize its operating
efficiency at its distribution center and retail stores. After
considering enlarging its distribution center and docks, Serge
Blanco, always at the forefront of new technologies, opted for the
deployment of the TAGSYS RFID solution. Serge Blanco deployed the
TAGSYS RFID solution in early 2009 and plans to expand it over its
entire retail network throughout 2010.
"After having conducted a study among other
clothing retailers, such as Boboli and Throttleman, two end users of
the TAGSYS RFID system, we decided to go for the same solution,"
explains Mathieu Pradier, VP Operations at Serge Blanco. "We
found the TAGSYS solutions to be the most complete, most mature and
easiest to integrate with our existing processes".
Bhima & Brothers Jewellers and
Mitsukoshi
Indian jewelry retailer Bhima
& Brothers Jewellers is tracking high-value inventory, providing
customers with immediate information regarding its jewelry, with an
HF RFID system deployed in February 2009 by MphasiS at one of its
five stores and using Assa Abloy tags and Feig and Brooks Automation
interrogators.
Inventory now takes not 36
man-hours but one. Time to complete a sales transaction dropped from
6-8 eight minutes to less than one.
100 percent inventory
accuracy and correct product information to customers are achieved.
At 10,000 items per store, inventory count was restricted to only the
most valuable goods and an average total net gold weight in the
store. Now full inventory is easily carried out and sales people have
more quality time with customers.
Mitsukoshi and Hankyu Department Stores, New Balance, Reno
Mitsukoshi and Hankyu Department Stores in
Japan are RFID tagging footwear using NTT Comware middleware. An RFID
demonstration conducted in a women's shoe department proved it could
improve the quality of service. Mitsukoshi rolled out this system at
its Nihonbashi Main Store, and Hankyu Department Stores began at its
Umeda Main Store women's shoes section. Mitsukoshi has also
undertaken a trial embedding RFID tags on Shiseido cosmetics to
create what the companies call the "department store of the
future."
New Balance sells nearly 40
million pairs of shoes a year. It has implemented an item-level RFID
solution to track footwear from distribution center to retail store
using Checkpoint's TrueVue, tags from Avery Dennison and Motorola
interrogators. Greater inventory visibility and item level accuracy
above 99.5% resulted.
Reno GmbH, one of Europe's largest
shoe companies, is based in Germany and operates more than 700 stores
in 15 countries. Parent Hamm-Reno-Group GmbH 7 Co KG (HR Group) has
over 1700 outlets across Europe. It will embed RFID in shoes sold at
hundreds of stores. Checkpoint Systems provides the RFID tags,
including wafer-thin RFID chips designed especially for shoes from
its Asian production facilities. In addition it will supply systems
that allow check-out clerks to deactivate tagged shoes. Reno will
curb theft. Reno has been using RFID technology to track product
shipments from its factories to its stores for several years and
tracking individual products is the logical next step.
Damas, The Jewellery Store, DeGrisogno
Damas stores and The Jewellery Store in the
United Arab Emirates are using RFID on jewellery for security and
tracking purposes. DeGrisogno in Switzerland is doing the same with
watches and jewellery using TAGSYS systems and WinWatch and other
watchmakers in Switzerland also tag parts and watches with RFID.
Figure Some targeted benefits of RFID for
apparel, Source IDTechEx
Major European
conference
At the event RFID Europe in
Cambridge UK 29-30 September, RFID in fashion will be covered by GCS
Consulting of Germany which works with many major brands, BT of the
UK behind the largest project - at Marks and Spencer - and others.
Many relevant technical advances will be presented for the first time
and new regulatory initiatives will be explained. The boom in RFID in
East Asia, not least in apparel manufacture and sale will be analysed
and the co-located Smart Card Networking Forum will give the latest
on RFID cards used in retailing and elsewhere.
ENDS - 1,500 words
For more
information on the topic please contact the author Dr Peter Harrop at
p.harrop@IDTechEx.com or to find out more about the RFID Europe 2009
conference please contact the Event Manager Mrs. Corinne Jennings at
c.jennings@IDTechEx.com
IDTechEx
Dates:
RFID Europe 2009
Sep
29-30 | Cambridge, UK www.IDTechEx.com/RFIDeurope Printed Electronics Asia 2009 | Sep
30-Oct 1 | Tokyo, Japan www.IDTechEx.com/peASIA Energy Harvesting & Storage USA |
Nov 3-4 | Denver, USA www.IDTechEx.com/ehUSA RTLS & Wireless Sensor Networks Summit | Nov 3-4 | Denver, USA www.IDTechEx.com/wireless Printed Electronics USA 2009 | Dec 2-3
| San Jose, USA www.IDTechEx.com/peUSA
|