Promo - March 2008 - (Page 14) Amy Johannes RETAIL RFID Ramp-Up P&G likes test results, rolling out tags on P-O-P displays What’s the purpose of a shopper marketing promotion if the merchandise is sitting in the store’s back room rather than out on display where it belongs? Radio frequency identification promises to reduce, if not eliminate, the chance for such miscommunication at retail, as RFID tags are increasingly being placed on P-O-P displays. But adoption is slow going besides pioneers such as WalMart (see sidebar) and Best Buy. Some retailers are still reluctant to front the costs. “This is kind of a chicken and egg problem,” says Paul Cataldo, vice president of marketing for OatSystems, an RFID vendor. “Without infrastructure, there’s no incentive to tag.” Tag prices have dropped to 10 cents to 15 cents apiece, but are still too high for some retailers, experts say. “Some companies kind of call this the ‘test and learn environment,’” says Steve David, senior advisor to Boston Consulting and Procter & Gamble’s former chief information officer. “The cost of the RFID chip hasn’t fallen far enough for it to be ubiquitous.” The testing continues. Some firms like P&G are diving in. The company has been running pilots with retailers since 2003 to test the technology on displays. “We knew there were clearly opportunities to improve display compliance,” says Paul Fox, P&G’s director of global operations, external relations and corporate media relationships. “What we didn’t know was just how big the opportunity was.” RFID allow manufacturers to “see inside the supply chain,” track a display’s exact location, the time the unit Kimberly-Clark is one manufacturer using RFID tags on its Depends P-O-P displays . A worker from the company’s operation center is shown tagging the unit before it’s shipped to a retailer. is erected and when it’s taken down. In a 2006 pilot, P&G tagged 19 displays for Braun’s Cruzer electric razors. During the three-week period, the company found that one-third of displays were executed properly, another third were erected at some point during the promotional period and one-third of stores didn’t comply. The result: Displays set up on time and in the right location had 61% greater sales, Fox says. On average, P&G found that retailers erect P-O-P displays correctly about 45% of the time. In a pilot, compliance for the Gillette Fusion razor launch jumped from 70% to 92% when the displays were equipped with RFID tags. P&G says it has already recouped its multimillion investment in RFID technology. The company is now ramping up, applying tags to 40,000 displays every month for five retailers in North America and Europe, Fox says. That’s a 100% year-over-year increase from 2007. “What we are seeing today is a payout ratio of at least 5-to-1 in terms of increased sales,” Fox says. Sales rose as much as 24% with RFID-enabled promotional displays, according to research conducted last year by OatSystems for a major drug store chain and CPG companies. Some retailers are keeping quiet about their RFID experience. CVS/Pharmacy ran a pilot last year in the East. The company says it has no current plans for additional testing or a larger rollout. Despite a slower than expected adoption, experts see a brighter future. “If you do anything new it takes a while for it to catch on,” says Bob Michelson, CEO of Solutions, a retail technology firm, which manages an RFID tracking system for Walgreen’s. “It is now catching on.” l P WAL-MART TO REQUIRE ITEM-LEVEL TAGS Wal-Mart Stores Inc. is giving its suppliers a new reason to take its RFID mandate seriously: Starting Oct. 31, 2009, suppliers that ship products to Sam’s Club’s distribution center in DeSoto, TX, will be required to tag each product. The DeSoto facility will also be the first to mandate caselevel tagging this October. Previously, Wal-Mart’s focus has been on pallet-level tags. And a new rule that took effect Feb. 1 urges suppliers to affix tags to pallets, or pay a $2 per pallet fee. Four more distribution centers will implement the directive by the fall. All 22 distribution centers are to comply by Jan. 31, 2009 when the fee goes up to $3 per pallet. The fee is “meant as an accommodation for suppliers until they develop their own solution,” says Wal-Mart spokesperson John Simley. Wal-Mart Stores, the parent company of Wal-Mart and Sam’s Club, has been working with its suppliers since 2004 to attach tags on products sent to its stores. “A lot of suppliers said to us, ‘We understand what the benefits are, but what do you want us to do and when?’” Simley says. “So, we laid out a graduated implementation strategy.” The motivation: Greater efficiency.—Amy Johannes 14 March 2008 / WWW.PROMOMAGAZINE.COM / Promo
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Promo - March 2008 Promo - March 2008 Editor's Note Girls' Club New Eco Regs? They're Not Going Anywhere Spreads Easily RFID Ramp-Up From Backyard to Broadcast Commentary VROOOM! Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet Q&A: Measuring Up Free Ink The Agency Center Resource Center Promotions 2.0 Index of Advertisers Promo - March 2008 Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page Cover1) Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page Cover2) Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page 3) Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page 4) Promo - March 2008 - Promo - March 2008 (Page 5) Promo - March 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 6) Promo - March 2008 - Editor's Note (Page 7) Promo - March 2008 - Girls' Club (Page 8) Promo - March 2008 - Girls' Club (Page 9) Promo - March 2008 - New Eco Regs? (Page 10) Promo - March 2008 - New Eco Regs? (Page 11) Promo - March 2008 - They're Not Going Anywhere (Page 12) Promo - March 2008 - Spreads Easily (Page 13) Promo - March 2008 - RFID Ramp-Up (Page 14) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 15) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 16) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 17) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 18) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 19) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 20) Promo - March 2008 - From Backyard to Broadcast (Page 21) Promo - March 2008 - Commentary (Page 22) Promo - March 2008 - Commentary (Page 23) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 24) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 25) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 26) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 27) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 28) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 29) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 30) Promo - March 2008 - VROOOM! (Page 31) Promo - March 2008 - Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet (Page 32) Promo - March 2008 - Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet (Page 33) Promo - March 2008 - Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet (Page 34) Promo - March 2008 - Stuff We Can't Do Here Yet (Page 35) Promo - March 2008 - Q&A: Measuring Up (Page 36) Promo - March 2008 - Q&A: Measuring Up (Page 37) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 38) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 39) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 40) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 41) Promo - March 2008 - Free Ink (Page 42) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 43) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 44) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 45) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 46) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 47) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 48) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 49) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 50) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 51) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 52) Promo - March 2008 - Resource Center (Page 53) Promo - March 2008 - Promotions 2.0 (Page 54) Promo - March 2008 - Promotions 2.0 (Page 55) Promo - March 2008 - Promotions 2.0 (Page 56) Promo - March 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 57) Promo - March 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page 58) Promo - March 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover3) Promo - March 2008 - Index of Advertisers (Page Cover4)
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