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Does RFID Improve Inventory Accuracy? Bill Hardgrave University of Arkansas RFID Research Center Note: this document is copyrighted ( 2008) and confidential; do not distribute or cite without explicit permission.
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Who are we? Purpose: to investigate the business value and implications of RF technologies ~ 15 faculty and ~100 students Privately funded: more than 50 companies provide funding and equipment for the Center Founding member of GRFLA
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RFID Lab 10,000 sq. ft. lab in Hanna’s Candle Co. 4,500 sq. ft. lab in Zero Mountain (cold storage facility) Replicates RFID in supply chain: dock doors, conveyor, impact doors, forklifts, pallet wrappers, item level, etc. Serves as research and teaching facility Provides services to the industry (tag type, tag placement, reader/antenna type) EPCglobal Accredited Performance Test Center
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RFID Lab Lab simulates the complete retail supply chain from supplier’s shipping dock to store shelf
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RFID Lab “The [University of Arkansas] RFID Lab is the most advanced of any owned by a university …” Mark Roberti, Editor of RFID Journal,
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RFID Lab In the past year, more than 1100 people from 500+ companies visited the lab
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RFID Lab
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Premise Does RFID improve inventory accuracy? Huge problem –Forecasting, ordering, replenishment based on PI –PI is wrong 65% of the time –Estimated 10% reduction in profit due to inaccuracy What can be done? –Increase frequency (and accuracy) of physical counts –Identify and eliminate source of errors
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Causes of Inventory Inaccuracy PI inaccuracy causes Results in overstated PI? Results in understated PI? Can case-level RFID reduce the error? Incorrect manual adjustment Yes TheftYesNoPartial Damaged/spoiledYesNoPartial Improper returnsYes No Mis-shipment from DC Yes Cashier errorYes No
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Examples – Manual adjustment PI = 12 Actual = 12 Casepack size = 12 Associate cannot locate case in backroom; resets inventory count to 0 PI = 0, Actual = 12 (PI < Actual) Unnecessary case ordered
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Examples – Theft PI = 20 Actual = 20 7 stolen PI = 20, Actual = 13 (PI > Actual) Sell 13 over the next week: PI = 7; Actual = 0 ROP = 6; thus, no order placed; no more sales
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Examples – Cashier error Product AProduct B PI10 Actual10 Sell 3 of A and 3 of B, but Cashier scans as 6 of A PI = 4 Actual = 7 (PI < Actual) PI = 10 Actual = 7 (PI > Actual)
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The Study All products in air freshener category tagged at case level 23 weeks 16 stores (8 test, 8 control) –Mixture of Supercenter and Neighborhood Markets PI accuracy determined each day: PI – actual 10 weeks to determine baseline Same time, same path each day
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The Study Looked at understated PI only –i.e., where PI<actual Treatment: –Control stores: nothing; business as usual –Test stores: business as usual, PLUS used RFID reads (from inbound door, sales floor door, box crusher) to determine count of items in backroom Auto-PI: adjustment made by system For example: if PI = 0, but RFID indicates case (=12) in backroom, then PI adjusted – NO HUMAN INTERVENTION
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Results
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12% -1% 12% - (-1%) = 13%Numbers are for illustration only; not actual
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Results
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Implications What does it mean? –Inventory accuracy can be improved (with tagging at the case level) –Is RFID needed? Could do physical counts – but at what cost? –Improving understated means less inventory; less uncertainty Value to Wal-Mart and suppliers? In the millions! –When used to improve overstated PI: reduce out of stocks even further –Imaging inventory accuracy with item-level tagging …
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Bill Hardgrave bhardgrave@walton.uark.edu 479.575.6099 http://itri.uark.edu For copies of white papers, visit http://itri.uark.edu/research Keyword: RFID
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