Wal-Mart: Radio Tags Keep Shelves Stocked
Oct 27 3:24 PM US/Eastern
NEW YORK
http://www.breitbart.com/news/2005/10/27/D8DGIIV85.html
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said its fast-growing use of radio-transmitting
inventory tags has helped boost sales by keeping shelves better stocked with
key merchandise.
The use of RFID, or radio-frequency identification tags, has reduced
out-of-stock merchandise by 16 percent at the company's stores that have
begun to use the technology over the past 12 months, Linda Dillman,
Wal-Mart's chief information officer, said at the company's annual analyst
meeting Wednesday. Wal-Mart has been able to restock RFID-tagged items three
times as fast as non-tagged items, she said.
The world's largest retailer began its rollout of the technology with a
handful of stores and distribution centers in Texas last year, focusing on
tagging cases and pallets of higher-priced and faster- moving merchandise.
As of Oct. 31, Wal-Mart expects that 500 stores will be using RFID tags,
Dillman said.
Earlier this year, a formatting standard was agreed upon for an electronic
product code, or EPC, to replace the old UPC bar code, clearing the way for
mass participation by manufacturers of all kinds, Dillman said. Suppliers
also have become more enthusiastic about the tags as their price has
dropped, now selling for between 10 and 30 cents on average, compared with
20 to 50 cents a year earlier.
"We expect more suppliers to tag more items as tag prices fall," Dillman
said.
The Bentonville, Ark., retailer now has more than 130 major suppliers
shipping merchandise to its distribution centers with RFID tags attached,
with about 5.4 million tags received at Wal-Mart distribution centers during
the past year. The company expects to add another 200 suppliers to the list
by January, with about 1,000 stores and warehouses ready to receive their
tagged goods, Dillman said.
Wal-Mart also plans to ramp up an RFID-based system at its Sam's Clubs next
year that will help it better locate pallets, she said. The company plans to
bolster the RFID program with yet another group of suppliers, which will
number about 300, in January 2007, Dillman said.
The company continues to expand its use of the technology despite pockets of
resistance from consumer-privacy groups. On Saturday, a group organized by
CASPIAN, or Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering,
picketed a Wal-Mart supercenter in Dallas, protesting Wal-Mart's tagging of
printers and document scanners from Hewlett-Packard Co. being sold at the
store.
"This will make objects _ and the people wearing and carrying them _
remotely trackable," said Katherine Albrecht, a spokeswoman for the consumer
group. "We have rock-solid evidence that they are already devising ways to
exploit that potential."