This series of articles has presented strategies for
winning RFID (radio frequency identification) integration
business and positioning your firm against all types of
competitors. But winning the job is no guarantee it will be
done successfully. We have participated in dozens of
successful RFID projects with all types of partners. That
experience has produced the following perspective on the ideal
qualities a firm should possess to be an outstanding RFID
integrator.
1. An eye for evaluation
The first
quality, and one of the most essential, is the ability to look
into the customer’s business and clearly see how RFID can be
introduced to provide value. Integrators should possess the
skills to prepare a business case analysis for the customer
after reviewing processes and operations. These steps
sometimes receive minimal attention by prospective integrators
who try to fit their favoured solutions into the customer’s
business, without truly tailoring the solution to meet the
needs at hand. At times we all face the dilemma: should we
give customers what they want, or give them what they need?
This situation is likely to come up numerous times with
companies who are implementing RFID systems to meet the
shipment tagging requirements of their customers. Some
customers will insist on a “slap-and-ship” system that meets
customer requirements and minimizes the investment and impact
elsewhere on the business. Others will be open to more
comprehensive systems with complementary applications.
2. Flexibility to Fit
A complete
integrator is not only able to recommend different solutions,
but to develop and fulfil them as well. Handling multiple RFID
product lines and associated data collection, computing and
communications systems provides the flexibility to do this. No
single tag size, frequency, printer/encoder, reader or antenna
is optimal for every RFID application. To develop systems that
provide reliable technical performance and are optimized for
the usage environment, integrators will need to be experienced
with different brands and styles of RFID inlays, label
materials, antenna designs and other components.
3. Complementary competencies
Being a
great RFID integrator means integrating more than RFID. The
data collected by RFID is always integrated into other data
collection systems or software applications. The more pieces
of the total system you can provide the more valuable you can
become. It is especially important for RFID integrators to be
competent with bar code, industrial mobile computing and
wireless networking equipment, because RFID will often be
integrated with these systems. Converged RFID products are
already available, including mobile computers with integrated
bar code and RFID readers, and smart label printers that can
print bar codes while encoding an embedded RFID tag. Sometimes
users will prefer to add RFID-only equipment to their
applications. Experience with different data capture and
communications systems enables the integrator to propose and
deliver the most efficient solution.
4. Software savvy
RFID systems can
provide lots of data. But they only create value if the data
provides actionable information. Software integration skills
are critical for converting raw RFID data into timely
information that the customer can use to improve their
operations. Integrators with RFID middleware experience are a
rare and valuable commodity. Integrating RFID middleware may
also involve installing a server to manage information flow
between the data collection and enterprise systems. It may
also be necessary to develop interfaces between the RFID
systems and legacy software applications. Clearly, RFID
readers are not plug-and-play peripherals that can be dropped
into enterprise systems. A variety of software integration
abilities is needed to make RFID data useful.
5. Adaptable attitudes
To be an RFID
integrator is to be at times a business consultant, wireless
engineer, application developer, labelling specialist, IT
system architect and network administrator, all while being a
technology educator. Be prepared to fill these roles on demand
as projects move from proposals to actual systems, or be
prepared to quickly partner with another firm that can. The
ability to quickly form relationships, with customers and
complementary technology vendors, will increase your chances
of success. RFID is still emerging, and many customers will be
counting on you to guide them through their first experience
with the technology.
Bernard Williams is RFID Business
Development Manager for Europe Middle East and Africa. He also
sits on the Metro Solutions team involved with the development
and testing of RFID (Radio Frequency Identification)
technology for the retail supply chain. He has worked for
Zebra over the past seven years holding posts as UK Sales
Manager and European Business Development Manager. He was
previously the Director of Sales at Eltron International for
Europe, the pioneers of entry-level bar code printers for the
European market. Williams is a qualified mechanical engineer
and spent a decade in the production equipmentmanufacturing
sector both in the UK and Europe with Domino Printing Sciences
PLC developing new business solutions for the production
environment.
Order product brochures from companies offering RFID
solutions