Each
tag's unique
Electronic Product Code (
EPC) is
read again when the units are shipped, and the EPCs are compared against the purchase order to make sure the appropriate units are on the pallet. If a unit is returned, HP can read its tag's EPC and track it back through the supply chain. On the other hand, if a unit needs to be repaired, the tag can be used to record what has been done and track the repairs.
As the system is expanded to more facilities, HP could use the tags for quality control. For instance, if a consumer returned a unit, HP could scan the
RFID tag and look up information associated with its EPC in a database. By looking up time, date and place the unit was built, HP could determine whether there have been problems with other units made by that manufacturer, or if a problem exists with an employee who might require more training.
Furthermore, Chenneveau provided details about the benefits HP gets by tagging boxes of individual printers in its Memphis distribution center for shipments bound for
Wal-Mart. He said his company is using software from
T3Ci to analyze EPC data supplied by the retailer. One advantage of this is that when a discrepancy arises over exactly how many units were delivered, HP can use the data to support its claim. Thus, HP can save by reducing invoice deductions.
According to Chenneveau, HP tagged about 2.3 million of the 45 million printers it shipped worldwide last year. His company, he noted, has been paying about 25 cents for Gen 1 tags, but plans to move to second-generation EPC tags starting in April, which should cost less than 10 cents apiece. He added that vendors have improved the quality of their tags and interrogators, and that the failure rate of tags is much lower now than it was a year ago.
"My guys like to say the tags work the way they were designed to work," he said. "The tags weren't designed to read through water or metal. Obviously, our printers and cartridges have metal in them. We've done a lot of work with the placement and
orientation of the tags to get the read rates we need. And where we can't read all the tags on a pallet, we use
middleware to associate items with each other and the pallet, so if we have 10 items associated with one another on a pallet and we read items one, three, five and seven, we know we have all 10."