THE ADOPTION OF RFID CONTINUES TO
GATHER momentum, and hardware and
software spending will accelerate
in late 2006 and 2007 as true benefits
are documented, according to Gartner,
Inc.
Worldwide
RFID spending is expected to total
$504 million in 2005, up 39 percent
from 2004. RFID will begin to experience
broader industry adoption with business
value-focused implementations toward
the end of 2006 when new license
revenue totals $751 million. By
2010, Gartner forecasts worldwide
RFID spending to surpass $3 billion.
"Just
because bar codes are used extensively
in distribution centers does not
mean RFID will be," said Jeff
Woods, research vice president at
Gartner. "Businesses are beginning
to discover business value in places
where they cannot use bar coding,
which will be the force that moves
RFID forward. As the innovators'
trials become public, broader deployments
across emerging sectors, not just
consumer goods and retail, will
become evident in 2006 and 2007."
Gartner
analysts said companies should not
think of RFID tags as a replacement
for bar codes. The two technologies
will coexist with users applying
the right data collection technology
for the right process situation.
"For
the most part, bar codes are better
at collecting data in highly structured
and engineered processes, such as
warehouses, and this will likely
continue for the next five to seven
years," Mr. Woods said. "However,
RFID tags will be used for data
collection of mobile assets and
in largely chaotic or unstructured
business processes, ranging from
retail environments to hospitals,
enabling these environments that
lack sophisticated process engineering
or controls to be systematically
managed."
"In
many cases, RFID will be used in
areas where the process is not controlled
by an incumbent business application,"
Mr. Woods said. "Contrary to
the notion that companies will need
to "integrate" RFID data
into established transactional applications,
companies will likely need to develop
new business applications if they
want to put RFID at the center of
a process. In this, the opportunity
for real process innovation exists."
Aside
from asset tracking, each industry
will have specialized applications
of RFID that cannot be generalized.
Although industries can learn from
each other, industry-specific development
experiences will largely set the
pace for adoption in each industry.
Industries with the greatest opportunities
to use RFID include retail and aerospace
and defense, while the healthcare,
logistics and pharmaceutical industries
will adopt RFID the fastest
What
is RFID?
RFID is an automated data collection
technology that uses radio frequency
waves to transfer data between a
reader and an RFID tag to identify,
track or locate that item. RFID
does not, specifically, require
physical sight or contact between
the reader/scanner and the tagged
item.