IT/Infrastructure EDITOR'S NOTE
Viewing Articles: 81-90 of 122
Salespeople who avoid talking about RFID are hurting themselves now—and the industry in the long term.
Many vendors spend too much time touting the advantages of their technology over another, and not enough time promoting the benefits of RFID.
Rather than asking end users to believe the technology will deliver value, the RFID industry needs to provide data enabling them to quantify the benefits.
RFID is far more accurate than existing systems, yet some people continue to insist they can't adopt the technology until it is 100 percent reliable.
The region is beginning to embrace RFID as a means of improving efficiencies in many industries—but more education is needed.
Wireless sensors can help companies monitor mobile equipment and environments too large to be outfitted with wired sensors.
The three end-user companies that won our 2009 RFID Journal Awards are quite different, yet all had similar strategies leading to their success.
The energy last week at RFID Journal LIVE! 2009 showed there is still a great deal of interest in all types of RFID technologies.
A lot of new products will be on display at next week's RFID Journal LIVE! conference, including several solutions designed to solve specific business problems.
With sales slowing, CEOs worldwide are focused on reducing costs across their operations. That's bound to make them more open to using new technologies, including RFID.