Title: A Strategic Approach to RFID
1A Strategic Approach to RFID
Terri Crawford, Business IT Manager,
Distribution, Publix Super Markets, Inc.
2Publix Super Markets, Inc.
- Largest employee owned supermarket chain in the
US over 129,000 associates - 2005 retail sales of 20.5 billion
- Over 850 supermarkets in the Southeast United
States - Eight distribution centers (22 warehouses)
shipped over 640,000,000 cases in 2005 - Manufacturing Facilities
- 2 Bakery Plants,3 Dairy Plants, 3 Fresh Foods,
Deli Kitchen and Printing services
3Publix RFID Initiative
- Member of EPCglobal in since June 2004,
participating in the FMCG and HLS BAG - Support the adoption of RFID and the EPC network
within the supply chain - Currently have a Strategy and Architecture
project underway to define our RFID Roadmap
4Publix and the University of Florida
- Member of the Advisory Board to the UF/IFAS CFDR
- Committed to working with the Center in several
research initiatives - One of the many research initiatives we are
interested in is RFID - Beginning a joint research project with UF and 3
of our produce suppliers V2 - Visibility
Validated in the Perishable Supply Chain
5RFID Impact on Retail Industry
- Product tagging and tracking has implications to
all Supply Chain processes - The technology has the potential to
revolutionize the supply chain - All processes and technology systems associated
with product information and movement are
potentially impacted
6RFID Strategy and Architecture Project at Publix
- Correct approach is essential to achieve maximum
benefit to our business processes - Will use our Strategy and Architecture
Methodology - 3 5 year horizon
- Define the business processes, application, data
and infrastructure as-is and to-be models - Assess the readiness and timing for implementing
RFID in identified processes - Build the business case for implementation
- Develop Adoption Roadmap
7Scope of RFID SA
- Our SA project is focused on the EPC and EPC
Network - Includes all Supply Chain Processes from
Suppliers and in-house manufacturing to retail
stores - Considering the applicability of Pallet, Case and
Item tagging in each area - Process benefit divided into direct benefit (i.e.
labor savings, process or process step
elimination) or visibility benefit (i.e. new or
improved data availability, more accurate or
timely data)
- Functional areas
- Manufacturing
- Distribution
- Retailing
- DSD
- In Store Production
- Purchasing and Procurement
- Facilities
- Manufacturing
- Distribution Warehouse
- Stores
8Approach for RFID SA Project
9RFID SA Project Iterative Approach
Iterative Phases
Areas
1. CPG Dry
Phase 2, Phase 3 and Phase 4 Quantify,
Survey-Validate Assumptions And Finalize Impleme
ntation Roadmap
2. CPG Cold Chain
Phase 1 Assess-Define
3. Pharmacy
Incorporate learning's, and Best Practices
4. Fresh
10Key Deliverables
- Future Solution State
- EPC-RFID Enabled, High-level Process Future State
- High-level application Future State updated
supply chain application architecture - High-level technical Future State
- Suggested approach with package software
suppliers - Implementation Roadmap and Strategy
- Business case for RFID implementation, including
high-level cost and benefit estimates - Key opportunities mapped against dependencies
- 3-5 year Adoption Roadmap to include
pilot/rollout sequencing and triggers for project
kickoff - Publix positioning and focus at standards forum
11V2 Project Objectives
- Approached by UF to participate, jointly
developed the vision and objectives of the
project focus on business processes and the EPC
Network - To expand the research of the Center from a
controlled lab environment to a production
operations environment - To prove the EPC network viability and validate
the benefit of the additional visibility of
product through the supply chain - Gain knowledge of the technology and process
issues that will be associated with implementing
RFID
12V2 RFID Project with UF CFDR
- Testing with three produce suppliers Del Monte,
Tanimura Antle, and Duda - Contributors to the project include Alien,
Franwell, Ingersoll Rand/Thermo King, RedTail,
Symbol, VeriSign - Produce suppliers are shipping designated loads
to Publix with pallet and case level RFID tags - 3 receiving door portals are installed at the
Publix produce warehouse in Lakeland, Florida
13V2 Project, continued
- All information is posted to an EPCIS
- Developing a visibility dashboard to be used by
all participants - First Shipment with full visibility was completed
on 1/18/06 - Each supplier and Publix have customized the
dashboard for their individual business needs
through specific parameters
14V2 Project, continued
- UF CFDR has a full view of each participants data
and will aggregate appropriate information to be
shared with all partners - UF CFDR will evaluate and document the project
results, benefits and opportunities - Next phase will be determined based on the
results of the first phase - Expect to finish the first phase by May 2006
15Thank you