Clothing Manufacturer Invests Its ROI in RFID
Gardeur AG's RFID pilot to track garments from production to its warehouse using reusable tags was so successful that it plans to roll out the system company-wide.
Aug. 21, 2006—Gardeur AG, based in Moenchengladbach, Germany, manufactures pants and jeans for men and women, and supplies them to department stores and upscale boutiques. The company sews its garments at wholly owned plants in Germany and Tunisia, and at order manufacturers in Eastern Europe. Founded in 1920, Gardeur reported sales of 93 million euros in 2005, delivering 2.8 million garments—about half of which were exported. Gardeur also runs more than 630 boutiques in stores worldwide.
In 2003, Gardeur decided to deploy an RFID system to get a better view of its supply chain, reduce shrinkage (the loss of goods), increase its efficiency and gain experience with the technology. At the time, the company didn't know how many garments arrived at its main warehouse and distribution center, nor was it able to confirm that all goods shipped from production sites were actually delivered to the warehouse. And when garments did arrive, employees had to spend a lot of time manually sorting and counting the different styles, sizes and colors. In addition, as a supplier to Galeria Kaufhof, a Metro Group member that plans to use RFID across its supply chain, Gardeur knew it would be required to tag garments in the future.
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Gardeur chose to work with Infineon's RFID division because it felt secure about the company's technology know-how, says Dominik Berger, managing director of RF-iT Solutions GmbH in Graz, Austria. Infineon's RFID Software and Solutions division spun off and became RF-iT Solutions in June 2005. For the RFID pilot, the company decided to track clothes moving from its production site in Augustfehn, Germany, to its central distribution warehouse in Moenchengladbach. Individual items were tagged and placed on a trolley. Before loading them onto trucks, workers read the tags as the trolley passed through a gate equipped with an RFID interrogator. The tags were read again when the clothes arrived at the central warehouse and distribution center.
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