Sara Lee Wrestles With RFID, Looks for Benefits
IT executive advises peers to start testing the technology now
September 13, 2004 12:00 PM ETComputerworld -
Sara Lee Corp. is testing radio frequency identification tags on some product cases and shipping pallets to meet a mandate that RFID technology be used on goods sent to Wal-Mart Stores Inc.'s Dallas-area distribution centers starting in January. Ray Hagedorn, who works in Cincinnati as vice president of business solutions for the IT department in the Sara Lee Foods division, recently spoke with Computerworld's Carol Sliwa about what Sara Lee has learned about RFID. Excerpts follow:
Which applications will make use of the data that you gather through RFID? We're a major supplier [to Wal-Mart], and we had to focus on January. If we got too caught up in breaking down the processes and everything else like that at this particular juncture, we were going to waste a lot of time prematurely. So we said, "Let's narrow our focus. Let's learn about the technology."
Are you mostly taking a "slap and ship" approach now? Absolutely. And if everybody would be honest with you, that's what they're doing.
Are tags being read at the accuracy rates that Wal-Mart expects? Yes. At a case-by-case basis, as I go down through our process, I validate that case. A tag is on it. I encode the tag and then I immediately validate that, and I capture those statistics. If it doesn't read, I can pull that out and put another tag on until we get it read. That gives us our 100%.
It sounds time-consuming. Oh, absolutely.
Wasn't RFID supposed to automate the process? It's not ready for high volume.
What advice would you give your peers? It's early. Don't make huge investments. Get started, pick your point, learn. Pick a partner in your business [operations], because you can't do it [all] as technologists. We have our logistics group very involved with us every step of the way. In fact, we share co-management of [the RFID project].
What are some problems with RFID technology? The tags, without question. From the middleware side, this is still early in its evolution. There are many vendors out there right now that have middleware that is integrated into their standard offering of product, and they also have some things that can work with someone else's, like a warehouse management system and things like that. You can go through different research or consulting groups that give you a short list of things that you should be looking for in a middleware vendor. But don't worry about it. Your solution provider there probably is not going to be the solution
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