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Omnichannel And IoT: The Perfect RFID Storm

Omnichannel And IoT: The Perfect RFID Storm. Presented by. Sponsored by. About CCS 2014. 7 Webinars, 4 Days Sessions covering Store Ops, X-Channel, Loyalty, Big Data & more. Featuring industry analysts and consultants Free for Retail executives.

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Omnichannel And IoT: The Perfect RFID Storm

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  1. Omnichannel And IoT: The Perfect RFID Storm Presented by Sponsored by

  2. About CCS 2014 • 7Webinars, 4 Days • Sessions covering Store Ops, X-Channel, Loyalty, Big Data & more • Featuring industry analysts and consultants • Free for Retail executives http://ccs.retailtouchpoints.com/holiday-2014

  3. Follow The Webcast On Twitter #HolidayCCS @ConnectConsumer@RTouchPoints

  4. About Retail TouchPoints • Launched in 2007 • More than 28,000 subscribers • Provide executives with relevant, insightful content • Free Resources such as White Papers, E-book, Webinars, Research and Podcasts www.RetailTouchPoints.com

  5. BrightTALK

  6. Today’s Panelists John-Pierre Kamel Principal RFID Sherpas Richard Mader Director Emeritus, ARTS MODERATOR Debbie HaussEditor-in-ChiefRetail TouchPoints

  7. What Does RFID Look Like? • Usually involves a handheld reader • Rapid cycle counts of inventory • Number of counts depends on product category, Use Cases • Does not need to update inventory…but should for best results Photo Source: Motorola RFID Sherpas. Confidential. Not for distribution.

  8. RFID Solution Components RFID Readers RFID Tags Paper Ticket Adhesive Label Hard Tag Sewn-In Label RFID Sherpas. Confidential. Not for distribution.

  9. A Quick Recap Of Item Level RFID in Recent Years 2008 - 2010 2010 - 2012 2013 - 2014 • Round Rock Patent issues resolved • Companies open up about successes • Expansion into Fashion • Luxury segment growth • Uptick in European deployments (e.g. Asda, Decathlon, M&S) • Omni-Channel is a driver of RFID adoption • Display compliance drives fast ROI • Expansion beyond replenishment into jewelry • Item level projects picking up steam • Testing new categories, focused on replenishment • Department Store focus

  10. 2008-2012

  11. 2008-2012

  12. 2013-2014

  13. 2013-2014

  14. 2013-2014 “Implementation of this next-generation technology is one of the most significant changes ever in how the Group’s stores operate.” Pablo Isla Chairman & CEO July 2014

  15. Latest News from Macy’s (2014) • RFID-enabled departments outperformed controls by 10% from 09-2013 to 05-2014 • Advanced program beyond Replenishment and into several Fashion categories • Timely replenishment of the sales floor is now an objective, in addition to inventory update • The ability to make single unit SKUs available to online shoppers has been a big win in Omni-channel • Decreased the number of undisplayed SCCs in the Footwear and Luggage to under 5%, compared to 25-30% pre-RFID

  16. RFID’s Appeal To Retailers Margin contribution from increased Full Price Sell-Through Margin contribution from higher Unit Sales Reduced shrink (internal & external) Labor productivity improvements Less working capital tied up in Inventory Repurposing of Loss Prevention budget dollars Aligns with Omni-Channel, Mobility initiatives

  17. RFID in Retail • Long time coming, since late 1990’s • Cost vs. Benefit • Shortage • Out of stock • Other priorities • Y2K • E-commerce

  18. The Silver Bullet Consumer Centric Retail And Omni Channel

  19. Omni Channel Serving the customer as they desire. • Features: • Buy on line, pickup in store (44% to 58%) • Buy in one store, ship from another (Urban Outfitters) • Buy items in store plus items via on-line device in store and pay one sale • Fulfill E-commerce order from stores.

  20. Why Omni Channel • John Lewis experienced a 22.6% increase in on-line sales during Christmas 2013. Accounting for 31.8% of total Christmas sales as click and collect orders were up by 61.8% over previous year. (ComputerWorld.com) • Macy CEO Terry Lundgren said at Goldman Sachs conference this month that they can ship direct to customers from all stores, and that pick-up in store results in 125% of intended order. (Marketing Daily)

  21. Omni ChannelCritical Success factor • Nearly 100% accurate item level inventory • Cannot disappoint the Customer • Drive to store purchased item not available • Buy on line never receive at home • It can happen (THD example) • Cost of buffer stock offsets sales gains What level of risk are you willing to accept?

  22. SKU Inventory Accuracy • Industry average approximately 70% • Thanks to Bar codes for sales recording. • RFID can improve to 95+% • 98% per Checkpoint • 27% improvement per RFID Research Center Assume 100 customer store pick ups, RFID changes 25 of these to these

  23. SKU Inventory Retain Accuracy • Physical Inventory • Auburn University 20,000 items per hours using RFID vs. 500 via barcodes. • Staff Discipline • Train processes • Monitor to enforce

  24. Key RFID Use Cases Within The Four Walls On-Floor Availability Display Compliance Reduce Out-of-Shelf Asset Protection Outside of the Four Walls Out-of-Stocks Eliminate Frozen Inventory Planning and Allocation • Omni-Channel Support • Interactive Retail • Inventory Accuracy • Reduction/Elimination of Manual Stock Counts • Anti-Counterfeiting • Anti-Diversion • Supply Chain Visibility

  25. Increase the “universe of product” you can make available across all channels Reduce buffer stock as low as possible for In-Store Pick-up and Store-to-Store transactions Significantly decrease decline rates of Fulfill-from-Store transactions, thereby decreasing split ships and extra labor of searching in multiple stores Enhances Omni-Channel

  26. Enhances Omni-Channel • Increase Store-to-Store orders by ensuring all available SKUs/SCC are displayed for sale, even if it is a onesie • Can significantly compress the window between purchase and pickup • Accuracy enhances mobility capabilities and allows for more efficient location based selling and alerting

  27. Internet of Things (IoT)

  28. IoT Value to Retail • 1.76 Trillion less than 50% realized (Cisco) • Opportunities • Omni order and pay anywhere • Intelligent pricing (Shelf labels) • Product movement • Equipment monitor and control • Tailored promotions • Customer service (Wi-Fi in store)

  29. Concerns • Privacy • Mobile and RFID, NFC one standard? • Active Tags, $2 vs. $.05 • Self driving cars

  30. Things I’d Like (TiL) • Find my “stuff” (Tile) • Clean out the “Frig” • Instructions for use

  31. Q&A

  32. Q&A John-Pierre Kamel Principal, RFID Sherpas Richard Mader Director Emeritus, ARTS MODERATOR Debbie HaussEditor-in-ChiefRetail TouchPoints

  33. Thank You For Joining Us The next Holiday Connected Consumer Series session…

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