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RFID

Hospitals amp up visitor management systems

Safeguards in place at many health-care facilities
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03/11/2013

YARMOUTH, Maine—Want to visit someone in the hospital?  It used to be if you knew the patient's room number you could breeze in through any public entrance, hop on an elevator and be on your merry way.

Hospital installs RFID to protect youngest patients

Infants safeguarded with ankle bands
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02/01/2013

DANBURY, Conn.—Danbury Hospital has deployed a radio frequency identification system to reduce the risk of abduction for the 2,500 babies born there each year.

Retail: Emerging technologies and emerging threats

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Monday, June 25, 2012

At the National Retail Federation's Loss Prevention Conference & Expo last week in New Orleans, Joe LaRocca, NRF's senior asset protection advisor, gave a keynote address titled, "The ETs of Retail: Emerging Technologies and Emerging Threats."

LaRocca argued that while many emerging technologies—near-field communication, mobile POS, touchless payments, RFID, e-receipts, etc.—will help drive retail sales, improve efficiencies and increase customer satisfaction, they will also pose challenges for loss prevention professionals.

Here's a clip posted by the NRF of LaRocca discussing the challenges associated with e-receipts.
 

Protecting the world's most valuable art, in the heart of NYC

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10/25/2010

DALLAS—As if protecting some of the most valuable artwork in the world wasn’t enough pressure, mix in eight floors of multi-use rooms in the heart of the biggest city in the country.

Privacy matters: Why you should pay attention

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09/20/2010

WASHINGTON—More than five years ago, the Brittan Elementary School in Sutter, Calif. had to rip out a smart card system it had deployed to streamline attendance-taking because it failed to inform students and parents about the use of the tracking technology.
The Security Industry Association, in collaboration with HID Global, on Sept. 9 released a set of privacy guidelines to ensure other organizations don’t face such harsh consequences for overlooking privacy matters again.

Major European retailer bets on RFID solution

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08/08/2010

HALLE, Germany—Using RFID technology could largely improve efficiency and transparency, advocates say; many retailers believe the technology remains cost prohibitive. However, Gerry Weber, a leading fashion and lifestyle company headquartered here, may have found the balance that not only makes implementing RFID technology affordable, but also will make them more profitable.

The Convergence of Loss Prevention and Item-Level RFID in Retail

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Friday, March 5, 2010

By Jim Caudill, SVP Marketing & Strategy, Xterprise

Recently reported sales at U.S. retail stores showed a significant improvement over the same month last year. These results are better than expected at many apparel chains and department stores and likely were aided by easy comparisons to sales of last January, when the recession really took hold in retail. Overall, leaner retail inventories meant retailers didn’t have to resort to steep markdowns to clear unsold merchandise as often as in years past. But simply slimming down inventories alone isn’t a sustainable solution - forward-looking apparel, specialty retailers, and department stores are leveraging RFID-based store inventory management applications to drive down costs, eliminate waste, and improve customer service and store security.

Why RFID?
In the 1980s the industry ushered in the age of standards and barcodes by adopting the UPC and the use of barcodes with store POS systems to increase efficiency and accuracy. In the 1990s the retail industry eagerly adopted sophisticated planning and optimization tools for forecasting, merchandising, warehousing and distribution, and pricing functions. The 2000s saw the advent of cross-channel integration, retail ERP platforms, online storefronts, more pricing/markdown optimization tools, and many specialized applications like retail PLM. Yet, for all the technology investments in these areas, in-store and distribution center-to-store inventory processes have remained largely unchanged over the past two decades. Recent advances in reliability and performance of a new generation of RFID tags and hardware, combined with a much lower price point, have given rise to a class of applications that applies lean principles, RFID technology, and item-level inventory management to address this gap and create value in the retail merchandise life cycle.

Item-level RFID effectively creates a high-definition view of inventory levels for the retailer, ROI of one year or less, and other significant benefits including:

• 90% or more efficient inventory counting processes
• 7–15% more accurate inventory as a result of effective measurement processes
• 10–25% improved service levels from the distribution center because of real-time replenishment and demand-driven ordering
• 15–50% reduced sales floor replenishment effort/stocking time
The business impacts include higher customer satisfaction, increased revenue, reduced labor, and reduced shrink.

RFID for Loss Prevention
A key benefit to keeping a closer eye on retail inventory as it moves from the supplier or factory, through the supply chain all the way to the ultimate consumer at the point of purchase, is a marked reduction in internal and supplier theft. Published case studies from leading retailers and academics point to 90-95% reductions in this area. This is a significant value point to a retailer as estimates suggest that close to half of all dollars lost to shrink are attributable to employees, the largest overall portion when compared to consumers, vendors, or errors.

Retailers have recognized an opportunity to take significant cost out of their store infrastructures with a standardized inventory and a simplified tagging process - leveraging the same RFID item-level store solution infrastructure for EAS item-level consumer l theft deterrence, detection and protection. Unlike traditional RF-based EAS solutions widely deployed today, RFID-based EAS gives apparel, specialty and other retailers visibility to theft incidents when they are occurring, but goes further by identifying exactly what was stolen and from where in the store. This invaluable information allows the retailer to quickly restock the otherwise unknown merchandise and avoid missed sales opportunities due to out-of-stocks. The fidelity of the data also gives the retailer insight into theft patterns and trends that might otherwise take weeks or months to see. Retailers also gain a tool that, when combined with CCTV, becomes evidence against shoplifters, even if they are not ultimately caught until a subsequent incident.

Standards to Increase Adoption
A recently published standard by GS1 EPCglobal represents just how far the promise of RFID-EAS and LP has come. This standard was developed and ratified by the members of this standards group, which includes RFID hardware and technology providers, retailers, application providers and traditional EAS market leaders Checkpoint and Tyco who now clearly accept RFID as the inevitable successor to their existing solutions and technologies. The next phase of the standards development will include updates to address tags that are embedded in products (sewn in for example), and the applications and product categories that will leverage these embedded tags that may require electronic deactivation or tag alteration.

Item-level RFID solutions provide many retailers the tools they need to maximize their lean operating advantage. From better inventory management and more efficient use of store employees’ time, to loss prevention improvements, item-level RFID solutions are making better execution a reality at the store level.

Retail mania: Countdown to Black Friday

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Friday, November 20, 2009

In exactly one week, shoppers will be storming stores in search of great deals to kick off the holiday shopping season. Retailers, of course, are preparing for this onslaught of customers and enticing them with early morning and other money-saving specials. Like every year, there are concerns about crowd control and ensuring customers don't get too out of hand in an effort to save some dough and repeat the tragedies of previous years where people were trampled and injured on Black Friday.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration is urging retailers to step up their crowd control and other safety precautions, per this article from Bloomberg. OSHA is recommending retailers use bullhorns to manage crowds, set up barricades or rope lines and clear entrances of shopping carts and other potentially dangerous obstacles. Mega-retailers like Wal-Mart said they will leave most of its 833 U.S. stores open overnight on Thanksgiving to avoid fostering crowds on Friday morning of unmanageable size, according to the article.

I've never attempted to shop on Black Friday and this is exactly why. I really don't like being treated like cattle and, in general, I avoid large crowds whenever possible. For some reason, people seem to immediately lose any inkling of common sense when put in a crowd and I would rather not be one of them.

Fittingly, I'm here at the ADT retail media event in Boca Raton, Florida and today we'll be talking to some retailers not only about some of their strategies for the holiday shopping season but also about how the protection of merchandise is evolving. Specifically, I'm hoping to find out if RFID technology has reached the level where it's actually affordable for retailers. There will also be a presentation of other technologies that retailers are using to fight theft and control inventory. I'll keep you updated. Oh, and there's even suppose to be a real-live press conference, which I'm excited to attend.

And, to the folks who decided to put up the ginormous Christmas tree in front of my hotel more than a week before Thanksgiving: I say bah humbug.

When will RFID hit the big time?

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Tuesday, April 22, 2008
We've been wondering for years when RFID will finally gain widespread adoption (in our May issue we take a look at its value as an LP tool), but it has been slow going to say the least. When I asked John Koch, ADT North America's president about RFID's place in the market last year, he even said it is the $64,000 question.
Now Forbes is taking a look at it and it seems their article comes up with more questions than answers.

RFID vs. EAS

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Friday, March 14, 2008
There is some news coming out of the University of Arkansas' RFID Research Center this week. It released research that indicates RFID works in theft-deterrent applications.

"It's a preliminary investigation of RFID as an EAS. We established the baseline tests using common EAS technologies to establish how well RFID works," Bill Hardgrave, director of the RFID Research Center, told the RFID Journal. A white paper describing the project and its results will be available free on the RFID Research Center's Web site in April.

The project included ADT's Sensormatic EAS division and Checkpoint Systems. The companies contributed EAS technology, as well as consulting services. Researchers tested both RF and acousto-magnetic EAS technologies, as well as EPC Gen 2 tags and readers from a variety of vendors. They compared the results and found that RFID and traditional EAS offered equivalent read rates.

It is a pretty interesting study. I got a call from a very pesky reporter a few months ago who was asking me what I thought of RFID being used as a theft deterrent and was at a loss as to what to say. (That could be attributed to her pushiness though. The pressure was killing me!)

But what hampers RFID's use in these applications is its cost. It is still too cost prohibitive to use on a regular basis in stores, or so I've heard from some senior LP guys.

What do you all think?