Originally Published PMPN October
2004
EDITORIAL
RFID: Hope or Hype?
Its difficult to write about packaging these days without mentioning radio-frequency identification. Vendors are offering a host of RFID solutions, but are manufacturers ready to implement them?
Some are skeptical. According to META Group analysts, for example, FDAs estimated 3-year timeline for pharmaceutical companies to complete RFID tagging at the case and pallet levels is overly optimistic. The group points to challenges with the technology. Others cite high costs and the lack of standardization as factors that will cause delays. Despite these concerns, META Group has predicted an increase in the use of RFID technology over the next 18 months.
Industry seems to be responding to the RFID buzz. Companies have started pilot programs to test the feasibility of RFID for tracking and tracingnot only at the case and pallet levels but at the unit level as well. Accenture, for example, has undertaken a study dubbed Pharma Jumpstart to track bottles of prescription drugs through the supply chain. And Capgemini, a provider of consulting, technology, and outsourcing services, in conjunction with software vendor Supply-Scape, has opened an RFID Center of Excellence in Cambridge, MA, to test anticounterfeiting RFID pilots. The initiative allows pharmaceutical companies to pilot their drug pedigree authentication programs with leading RFID solutions providers.
Trade shows and conferences are also focusing more exclusively on RFID. This years Pack Expo International show in Chicago, November 711, debuts an RFID Pavilion where exhibitors will showcase technologies to upgrade conventional packaging lines into RFID-enabled lines capable of applying multi- pack, case, and pallet tags on-line. They will also exhibit technologies to verify the presence of tags, write to the tags, and validate data on the tags.
A quick glance at the Pack Expo conference schedule reveals a significant number
of sessions focusing on security packaging and RFID. Rob Manak, solutions consultant
for The Glennon Group, is presenting a session on Monday, November 8, titled
RFID and Practical Applications of the Smart Label. Manak agrees
that there is a lot of hype surrounding RFID, but he believes that hype is warranted.
There are a lot of naysayers with regard to the technology, he says,
but it seems to be functional to the point where rollout is not going
to create the headaches that a lot of people expect.
Manak sees case- and pallet-level tagging as a test arena for item-level taggingand
he sees the pharmaceutical industry as leading the way. Once we can get
things near perfect at the case and pallet level, and also get the cost down,
then I believe you will see the technology turning to the individual-product
level.
Manak admits that improvements are still needed. One of the issues Manak will
focus on during his presentation is the inherent problem with running an RFID
label through a printer. Bob Lanzendorf, OEM sales and marketing manager for
SATO America Inc., will join Manak to address attendees concerns.
Whether companies are for or against RFID, it is likely that at some point those
that havent done so already will have to jump on the RFID bandwagon. FDA
may not be mandating its use, but the agency strongly supports the technology
for securing the supply chain and is working closely with industry to come up
with solutions. This, coupled with the growing list of retailers that require
their suppliers to incorporate RFID at the pallet level, has many manufacturers
approaching RFID as if it were law.
If RFID follows in the footsteps of the bar code, their efforts will not be
wasted.
Kassandra
Kania, Managing Editor
Copyright ©2004
Pharmaceutical & Medical Packaging News



