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PERSPECTIVE
Wal-Mart Goes International
Smart retailers and suppliers around the world will be watching Wal-Mart's next moves.
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By Mark Roberti

Aug. 1, 2006—"This is absolutely a global directive for Wal-Mart."

That sentence was spoken back in June 2003 by Linda Dillman, then CIO of Wal-Mart, when she announced that Wal-Mart would require its top 100 suppliers to begin tagging pallets and cases in January 2005. Dillman indicated that Wal-Mart would quickly move to implement Electronic Product Code technology in Europe and then in the rest of its international operations.

Wal-Mart has not moved aggressively on the international front. One reason, perhaps, is that the first-generation EPC tags and interrogators didn't perform well in Europe. But in June, Wal-Mart announced plans for its first RFID trial outside the United States-albeit closer to home, in Canada, where the RF regulations and supply chain operations are similar to those in the United States.


Wal-Mart Canada said it plans to launch an RFID pilot this fall with about 16 suppliers to track products through the supply chain. (Illustration by William Rieser)
Wal-Mart Canada said it plans to launch an RFID pilot this fall with about 16 suppliers to track products through the supply chain. The pilot will involve Wal-Mart Canada's Mississauga distribution center and 20 of its Wal-Mart stores in southern Ontario. (Wal-Mart has 272 stores in Canada.)

The pilot is similar to the case and pallet tracking Wal-Mart is doing in the United States. Suppliers will apply EPC Gen 2 tags to cases and pallets of goods before shipping them. The tags will be read when a shipment reaches the Wal-Mart distribution center, when pallets and cases are shipped from the DC to individual Wal-Mart stores, in the hallway leading from the back-room storage area to the sales floor, and at the store's trash compactor and cardboard box bailer, the end of the supply chain.

The pilot is expected to run through 2007. Wal-Mart has not said what the next phase of the pilot will be. There are rumors in Canada that Wal-Mart will announce a mandate for its Canadian suppliers in September, but Wal-Mart denies that. "Right now, we have no plans beyond the pilot," says Christi Davis Gallagher, a spokesperson for Wal-Mart Canada. "And we have no plans to issue an RFID mandate. Tagging will be strictly voluntary."

Wal-Mart is taking a "measured approach" in Canada, Gallagher says. "We're not in a hurry to roll it out chain-wide. We're learning from what they've done in the United States. We know RFID will help us to improve on-shelf availability for our customers. But we'd rather be right than fast."

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