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Staples Business Depot puts together Active RFID

Staples Business Depot puts together Active RFID

By:  David Carey  On: 01 Nov 2008 For: CIO Canada Creator

The company is reducing shrink, boosting sales and eliminating the need to do inventory counts on high-ticket items. And, oh yes, the system has so far not made a single reading mistake. A look at trial without error

“We look at the labour hours we’re saving and we estimate shrink on the classes of products that are tagged. We also look at how sales and gross margins change in those classes of merchandise, compared to the control group of stores,” he said.

Joe Soares, Staples’ director of process engineering, was the main liaison with the vendor on the project. He summed up the benefits succinctly: “Results from the five-store pilot confirm the positive outcomes we witnessed during our proof-of-concept phase. Supported by broader data collection and intense scrutiny, we experienced 100 percent inventory accuracy, reduced shrink, increased sales and reduced store labour costs, all against an extremely compelling ROI.”

Perhaps the most important metric, though, comes from the pilot stores themselves.

“We look at how the stores react when you offer to remove the technology. If they find it helps them with their jobs, even if we’re taking a little bit of labour hours away from them, then they don’t want to give it up,” said Williams. “But if the stores don’t like it for whatever reason, or if they don’t see it as helping them, then it’s rarely going to be successful.” So far, none of the pilot stores have wanted to go back to the old way of doing things.

One of the best things about the inventory-tracking system was the modest demand it put on IT to implement. “The test has been pretty straightforward from a technology perspective and from a support perspective,” said Williams. “We had some issues with the data integration but we sorted that out, so nothing too dramatic. The system itself has worked pretty much as advertised.”

So the project really has been pretty much a trial without error. Too bad it’s the exception rather than the rule.










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David Carey David Carey is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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