Companies Re-evaluate RFID Deployments
End users will invest strategically in the technology in 2009, in an effort to cut costs and gain a competitive edge.
We surveyed RFID Journal subscribers to learn how the global recession will affect their businesses. Respondents hailed from North America, Central and South America, Europe, Asia, Australia and Africa. A whopping 70 percent of respondents said that in past recessions businesses benefited from investing in information and other technologies. As for this recession, 75 percent of respondents said the current economic crisis will slow or reduce RFID deployments, but 47 percent said only "somewhat" or "a little." And 20 percent of respondents said it would not affect deployments.
End users in a wide range of industries—including aerospace, consumer packaged goods, health care, manufacturing and retail—shared their company's plans for investing in RFID this year. Given that 68 percent of end users said their company views technology as an investment in productivity, 2009 might not be such a gloomy year for the RFID industry.
Companies Have Different Goals for RFID
Clearly, companies need to control spending now, and end users are looking to RFID to help them save money by cutting costs and improving internal processes and operations. But the data indicates that companies are also looking toward the future: Thirty-five percent of respondents said their company is deploying RFID to gain a competitive edge. And while closed-loop applications tend to deliver faster benefits, 40 percent of respondents said their goal is to track goods to supply-chain partners.
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