By Claire Swedberg
July 18, 2011—The VICS Item Level
RFID Initiative (VILRI), a group composed of retail supply chain participants and organizations aimed at standardizing deployment of
item-level RFID tagging, has established plans to publish a road map by mid 2012 that retailers, suppliers and solution providers can follow for implementing RFID systems.
The
Voluntary Interindustry Commerce Solutions Association (VICS) spearheaded VILRI's formation more than a year ago. VICS' mission is focused on improving the efficiency and effectiveness of the retail supply chain. In June 2010, the association—together with standards organizations
GS1 US and
GS1 Canada—established the VILRI, and officially announcing its creation five months later (see
Major Retailers, Industry Groups Launch Item-Level RFID Guidelines Initiative and
Item Level RFID Initiative Focuses on Supplier Benefits).
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Bill Connell, Macy's senior VP of logistics and operations
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The founding members of VILRI—which include
Levi Strauss,
Jockey,
VF Jeanswear,
The Jones Group and
Macy's,
Wal-Mart,
JC Penney and
Dillard's—were intent on meeting the needs of retailers and their suppliers as they adopted RFID tagging of products. The adoption of item-level RFID technology has grown, as retailers and their suppliers seek to increase inventory accuracy, reduce out-of-stocks and prevent loss. Today VILRI membership consists of nearly 200 organizations, including many of VICS' 160 members.
"The best way to describe this initiative is the bringing together of retailers, suppliers, associations, academic institutions and solution providers under the umbrella of VICS to develop collaborative adoption of a standard [for item level RFID tagging]," says Bill Connell, cochair of VILRI's Communications & Outreach committee and senior VP of Macy's logistics and operations.
During its first year, VILRI organized three separate committees (namely "Communications and Outreach," "Business Case and Value Proposition" and "Getting Started") and launched proof-of-concept trials by Macy's Dillard's and JC Penney at a laboratory operated by the
University of Arkansas' RFID Research Center, as well as in select stores.