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To track 250M pieces, Chep turns to tech ORLANDO
- In 1999, pallet rental company CHEP began experimenting with radio devices to
collect information on its pallets while they were being moved from place to place. This
week, Chep turned its in-house radio frequency experiment into a service for its
shipping and receiving clients. For customers on the manufacturing and distribution sides of the business, detailed data on their supply chain holds deep value. Radio frequency identification uses microchips and specialized radio antennas to send and receive information. That's how
Chep is using the technology, but that's not where the company started. Chep, a global company with 7,700 employees in 42 countries, then put its 300-plus software developers to work troubleshouting and cleaning up the data collected from those 250,000 pallets. When Chep first began looking into selling its RFID expertise, it looked first to Wal-Mart. At that time, Wal-Mart appeared to be a likely first customer for Chep's RFID products, Mendes says. The world's largest retailer told its suppliers last summer that ot would require RFID. It is expected to be a significant market. Research firm IDC said earlier this year it expects spending on RFID to grow from $ 91.5 million in 2003 to almost $ 1.3 billion in 2008. There are hurdles. The first is setting standards. In the same way bar codes gained acceptance through universal product codes, the RFID also needs an agreed-upon set of standards. Privacy concerns form a more hazy challenge. That concern follows a science fiction logic that would see radio tags embedded in clothing, grocery packages, automobiles and just about everywhere imaginable. "If you extend that kind of scary fiction, they can track you everywhere", Mendes says. But the scary fiction also bolsters Chep's pitch for tracking departure and arrival times of particular pallets, not consumer goods. The new technology has already led to growth for the company. Even before RFID, the company already collected tons of data, more than 40 terabytes worth. Chep recently expanded to lease practically all of the south Orlando office building it's in, so that its data center operations can handle collecting all the additional RFID data.
Source: Taken from Business Journal |