From the boardroom to reality: RFID in the fashion apparel / textile industry
Many Fashion Apparel / Textile companies - particularly those with a large network of stores - are well underway in terms of streamlining their supply chain and optimizing sales forecasts and distribution. They are now looking for ways to enhance revenues and market share by adopting modern ways of managing stores and inventory. RFID has now become a centerpiece in their strategic thinking. Some companies are also stepping up the process into actual implementation.
A new business model for Fashion Apparel and Textile chains
Leading Fashion Apparel / Textile companies have significantly modified their business model. Shifting away from manufacturing, Fashion Apparel & Textile companies have built competitive advantage, based on new ways of delivering value to their consumers.
A new business model has developed and stabilized based on a centralized approach to design and logistics. A typical business model now includes central design, hundreds of external suppliers, (most often in Asia), and one or two central warehouses that serve as a logistical hub for stocking a large networks of retail outlets.
The new frontier is in the retail store .The cost cutting side of supply chain management is to a large extent behind us. It has already yielded most of its benefits.
The time is coming for additional revenue generation. Today, most large network Fashion Apparel & Textile companies focus on improving the "store side" of their supply chain and distribution operations.
Active Fashion Apparel & Textile chains are absolutely confident that the first benefits of RFID implementation will come from store-level applications such as real and/or near real time inventory linked to stock management systems and store re-stocking processes.
Typically, industries go through 5 steps in implementing a store-level RFID initiative:
Market Observation: Talking to business specialists, they gather information on technology accuracy and reliability, costs, and future trends.
Business Case: Metrics are designed and implemented on core store-level and DC-level processes. Consumer behavior is assessed.
The upper line of the business case is built upon additional sales related issues, improved inventory, stock management, and store re-stocking refinements.
Costs savings include staff time allocations, counting / checking, shrink reduction.
Costs include hardware and software technology (tags, readers, software & middleware), integration, training, roll-out and systems operation.
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