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Table Of Contents

 Introduction

 The momentum created by global trends

 The Australian environment

 Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology




                                                            1
Table Of Contents

 Introduction

 The momentum created by global trends

 The Australian environment

 Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology




                                                            2
Visibility is today’s value chain problem … seeing a problem is 90%
of fixing it!




                         Poor visibility across the supply chain


                         Lack of transaction velocity


                         Inefficient capacity to optimise and synchronise supply chain
                        activity


                         Poor supply chain control and accountability


                         Black holes and high costs




                                                                                          3
The pace of change in the Auto ID business environment is
breathtaking .….. the tsunami effect!




                               Likely move




                                                            4
Table Of Contents

 Introduction

 The momentum created by global trends

 The Australian environment

 Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology




                                                            5
Global business trends

 Search for greater enterprise visibility - realisation that timely information is
 necessary for better decision making
 Move toward collaboration and connectivity by extending the supply chain
 Increased outsourcing of supply chain functions
 Focus on global supply chain security increasing – Secure Tradelanes Initiative*
 Increased use of RFID in end-use markets - last mile analytics
 Increasing awareness of benefits of RFID
 Current ERP, SCM and internal technologies generating diminishing benefits
 Competition for higher margins and lower prices in increasingly global market
 Vertical industry adoption to demonstrate ROI*
 Significant growth in healthcare, pharmaceutical industries and aerospace*




                                                                                      6
Global Auto-ID technology trends

 RFID technology is maturing and dynamic - Smart tagging*
 Significant increase in testing and piloting
 Advances in microelectromechanical (MEMS) and sensor systems
 Cooperative standard setting – ISO approval of EPC Gen 2 Class 1 UHF*
 Mandates creating momentum. Opportunity for competitive advantage*
 Momentum on item level tagging
 Falling prices
 Growing and broadening applications with pilots emerging on a daily basis*
 Technology integration*
 Partner eco-systems to deliver end-to-end RFID solutions
 Market improvement in RFID security and encryption
 Realisation that architecture is important and that one size does not fit all*




                                                                                   7
Whilst there is geographical imbalance in RFID, international
growth has been significant with positive moves in both Asia and
Europe
                         Case Studies per Country




                              No Case Studies

Adapted from IDTechEx




                                                                   8
By far the most common use of RFID is tracking across the supply
chain. Item level identification and tracking is the fastest growing
application
                              RFID Sectors




                              No Case Studies

Adapted from IDTechEx




                                                                       9
Surveys seeking to capture the reasons for adopting RFID indicate
that increased supply chain transparency is acknowledged as a
major benefit
                            Primary Reason RFID Adoption




                                 Percentage of responses

Adapted from ABI Research




                                                                    10
Table Of Contents

 Introduction

 The momentum created by global trends

 The Australian environment

 Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology




                                                            11
The pace of Australian industry and Government involvement in
RFID is significant

  DCITA’s Starting Guide to RFID for SMEs

  Over 44 case studies across multiple industries

  World class suppliers such as G2 Microsystems and Magellan

  World’s largest supplier of livestock tagging – Allflex

  Setting standards for tracking livestock

  Preponderance of consultancies, hardware suppliers, system integrators

  Standards setting bodies - GS1 Australia

  Peak body creation - RFIDAA




                                                                            12
Of the 44 case studies identified in Australia, 14 were in the
livestock and farming sector
                                   IDTechEX identified case studies in Australia




           Adapted from ISTechEx                Number of case studies




                                                                                   13
Example Australian case studies


 National Demonstrator Project                       Government
  –  Designed by CSIRO, overseen by GS1 Australia      –  Department of Corrections
     and partly funded by DCITA                        –  Defence
  –  Two supply chains operating an EPC Network        –  AFP
  National Livestock Identification System (NLIS)     –  Libraries
  –  License plating of over 10 million cattle        Retail Consumer Goods
  –  World’s best livestock tracking program           –  Coles Myer
 Mining                                               –  Moraitis tomato
  –  Coal                                             Logistics
  –  Nickel                                            –  Australia Post
  –  Copper




                                                                                      14
Booz Allen and RFIDAA’s 2006 Survey – Measuring Government’s
Understanding - also provides interesting insights into RFID
adoption in Australia.

                                               10%                        9%
               5%

     23%
                    27%                             14%                        14%
                                                               36%
                                    48%


   23%                              48%
                                               29%                      41%
              23%



  RFID General Knowledge      RFID Educational Materials    Understanding RFID
                                                            Standards


                 Very High   High         Neutral     Low   Very Low




                                                                                     15
Most recognised the supply chain, retail and transport activity, but
failed to identify the RFID investment in health

   Supply Chain                                                  90%

           Retail                                              85%

      Transport                                          80%

  Manufacturing                                    60%

        Defence                        47%

         Mining                  35%

          Health           20%

        Finance     11%

    Government      10%

                      Trailing         Following           Leading




                                                                       16
RFID investment and adoption would be driven by demonstrated
efficiencies and security enhancements


                         -100                      0                                  100


 Demonstrated efficiencies                       10%           70%

  Interoperability                           30%             40%
  Mandates                           85%               10%
 Regulations                                35%         25%
  Security                                       15%           65%


                                Low / very low                     High / very high




                                                                                        17
In relation to the perceived benefits, respondents believed that
RFID would improve the accuracy of information, deliver more
efficient processes and enhance security


                            0                                            100

Efficient processes                    70%

Improved customer service       45%
Information accuracy                              95%
Labour saving                    55%
Reduced costs                   50%
Security
                                       70%

                                  Perceived Benefit (High / very high)




                                                                               18
They also identified competing program priorities and
demonstrating in-year cost benefit as the major challenges to RFID
adoption in the Government sector

                        -100                               0                                     100


   Competing priorities                               5%                  80%
   Cost benefit                                      10%                70%
   Data volume                            65%                  10%
   Lack of executive
   sponsorship                               50%                 35%
   Lack of standards                          45%              15%
   Privacy                                     35%              20%
   System integration                            20%                 55%

                               Easy Implementation                   Implementation Challenges
                                 (Low / very low)                         (High / very high)




                                                                                                       19
We concluded that the implications for Government, and probably
for Australian industry, were as follows

  RFID is a significant business investment and demands a strong business case

  RFID can provide a breakthrough solution to improve the accuracy and timeliness of
   information

  Australian Government needs greater awareness to understand the implications of RFID on
   the broader Australian economy

  Getting involved early on can provide competitive advantage and shape the technology




                                                                                             20
Table Of Contents

 Introduction

 The momentum created by global trends

 The Australian environment

 Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology




                                                            21
2006 Larstan Business Report ‘Meeting of the Minds’ and BAH
European Study

  RFID is an enabling technology

  RFID is becoming a mainstream technology

  Focus on improving process efficiency

  ROI demonstrated in targeted applications

  Real benefit in providing visibility across extended supply chain

  Need middleware applications to provide an analytical overlay for data

  Key is not in obtaining data but in how organisations will use the data




                                                                             22
Global pilots
  Automotive                          Aerospace and Defence               Retail
   –  Sensor equipped processes        –  Boeing and Airbus - safety,        –  Improved on-shelf availability
                                          security, and MRO                  –  Reduced out-of-stocks
   –  Parts tracking
                                       –  Baggage tracking at Hong
  Consumer Packaged Goods                Kong, Narita, QATAR and           Mining
                                          Paris
   –  Gillette                                                               –  Asset management
                                       –  US DoD
   –  International Paper                                                    –  Warehouse management
                                       Transport                            –  Product tracking
  Financial services
                                       –  Postal and Courier
   –  Tracking physical goods                                               Government
                                       –  Airlines and airports
   –  Document tracking                                                      –  Tracking in cultural institutes
                                       –  Containers, pallets and totes
                                                                             –  Document tracking
  Manufacturing
                                       Health                               –  Access control
   –  Product life-cycle
      management                       –  Drug authentication                –  Libraries
                                       –  Patient safety                     –  US DoD and UK MOD
   –  Safety
   –  Tracking hazardous materials     –  Environmental sensing                         (1) 1 billion cars each with 100 sensors
                                                                                        generating data a 6.7 tbps
                                                                                        (2) Each new A380 jetliner will contain
                                                                                        10,000 RFID tags




                                                                                                                                   23
Contact information;




         Dr Clive Macmillan-Davies
         Booz Allen Hamilton (Australia) Ltd
         Level 7, 12 Moore Street
         Canberra City ACT 2601
         Tel +61 (0)2 6279 1951
         Fax +61 (0)2 6279 1990
         Mob +61 (0)438 670 859




                                               24

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DCITA and RFIDAA Sydney Breakfast V0.2

  • 1. Table Of Contents  Introduction  The momentum created by global trends  The Australian environment  Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology 1
  • 2. Table Of Contents  Introduction  The momentum created by global trends  The Australian environment  Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology 2
  • 3. Visibility is today’s value chain problem … seeing a problem is 90% of fixing it!  Poor visibility across the supply chain  Lack of transaction velocity  Inefficient capacity to optimise and synchronise supply chain activity  Poor supply chain control and accountability  Black holes and high costs 3
  • 4. The pace of change in the Auto ID business environment is breathtaking .….. the tsunami effect! Likely move 4
  • 5. Table Of Contents  Introduction  The momentum created by global trends  The Australian environment  Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology 5
  • 6. Global business trends  Search for greater enterprise visibility - realisation that timely information is necessary for better decision making  Move toward collaboration and connectivity by extending the supply chain  Increased outsourcing of supply chain functions  Focus on global supply chain security increasing – Secure Tradelanes Initiative*  Increased use of RFID in end-use markets - last mile analytics  Increasing awareness of benefits of RFID  Current ERP, SCM and internal technologies generating diminishing benefits  Competition for higher margins and lower prices in increasingly global market  Vertical industry adoption to demonstrate ROI*  Significant growth in healthcare, pharmaceutical industries and aerospace* 6
  • 7. Global Auto-ID technology trends  RFID technology is maturing and dynamic - Smart tagging*  Significant increase in testing and piloting  Advances in microelectromechanical (MEMS) and sensor systems  Cooperative standard setting – ISO approval of EPC Gen 2 Class 1 UHF*  Mandates creating momentum. Opportunity for competitive advantage*  Momentum on item level tagging  Falling prices  Growing and broadening applications with pilots emerging on a daily basis*  Technology integration*  Partner eco-systems to deliver end-to-end RFID solutions  Market improvement in RFID security and encryption  Realisation that architecture is important and that one size does not fit all* 7
  • 8. Whilst there is geographical imbalance in RFID, international growth has been significant with positive moves in both Asia and Europe Case Studies per Country No Case Studies Adapted from IDTechEx 8
  • 9. By far the most common use of RFID is tracking across the supply chain. Item level identification and tracking is the fastest growing application RFID Sectors No Case Studies Adapted from IDTechEx 9
  • 10. Surveys seeking to capture the reasons for adopting RFID indicate that increased supply chain transparency is acknowledged as a major benefit Primary Reason RFID Adoption Percentage of responses Adapted from ABI Research 10
  • 11. Table Of Contents  Introduction  The momentum created by global trends  The Australian environment  Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology 11
  • 12. The pace of Australian industry and Government involvement in RFID is significant  DCITA’s Starting Guide to RFID for SMEs  Over 44 case studies across multiple industries  World class suppliers such as G2 Microsystems and Magellan  World’s largest supplier of livestock tagging – Allflex  Setting standards for tracking livestock  Preponderance of consultancies, hardware suppliers, system integrators  Standards setting bodies - GS1 Australia  Peak body creation - RFIDAA 12
  • 13. Of the 44 case studies identified in Australia, 14 were in the livestock and farming sector IDTechEX identified case studies in Australia Adapted from ISTechEx Number of case studies 13
  • 14. Example Australian case studies  National Demonstrator Project  Government –  Designed by CSIRO, overseen by GS1 Australia –  Department of Corrections and partly funded by DCITA –  Defence –  Two supply chains operating an EPC Network –  AFP   National Livestock Identification System (NLIS) –  Libraries –  License plating of over 10 million cattle  Retail Consumer Goods –  World’s best livestock tracking program –  Coles Myer  Mining –  Moraitis tomato –  Coal  Logistics –  Nickel –  Australia Post –  Copper 14
  • 15. Booz Allen and RFIDAA’s 2006 Survey – Measuring Government’s Understanding - also provides interesting insights into RFID adoption in Australia. 10% 9% 5% 23% 27% 14% 14% 36% 48% 23% 48% 29% 41% 23% RFID General Knowledge RFID Educational Materials Understanding RFID Standards Very High High Neutral Low Very Low 15
  • 16. Most recognised the supply chain, retail and transport activity, but failed to identify the RFID investment in health Supply Chain 90% Retail 85% Transport 80% Manufacturing 60% Defence 47% Mining 35% Health 20% Finance 11% Government 10% Trailing Following Leading 16
  • 17. RFID investment and adoption would be driven by demonstrated efficiencies and security enhancements -100 0 100 Demonstrated efficiencies 10% 70% Interoperability 30% 40% Mandates 85% 10% Regulations 35% 25% Security 15% 65% Low / very low High / very high 17
  • 18. In relation to the perceived benefits, respondents believed that RFID would improve the accuracy of information, deliver more efficient processes and enhance security 0 100 Efficient processes 70% Improved customer service 45% Information accuracy 95% Labour saving 55% Reduced costs 50% Security 70% Perceived Benefit (High / very high) 18
  • 19. They also identified competing program priorities and demonstrating in-year cost benefit as the major challenges to RFID adoption in the Government sector -100 0 100 Competing priorities 5% 80% Cost benefit 10% 70% Data volume 65% 10% Lack of executive sponsorship 50% 35% Lack of standards 45% 15% Privacy 35% 20% System integration 20% 55% Easy Implementation Implementation Challenges (Low / very low) (High / very high) 19
  • 20. We concluded that the implications for Government, and probably for Australian industry, were as follows  RFID is a significant business investment and demands a strong business case  RFID can provide a breakthrough solution to improve the accuracy and timeliness of information  Australian Government needs greater awareness to understand the implications of RFID on the broader Australian economy  Getting involved early on can provide competitive advantage and shape the technology 20
  • 21. Table Of Contents  Introduction  The momentum created by global trends  The Australian environment  Opportunities to exploit RFID as an enabling technology 21
  • 22. 2006 Larstan Business Report ‘Meeting of the Minds’ and BAH European Study  RFID is an enabling technology  RFID is becoming a mainstream technology  Focus on improving process efficiency  ROI demonstrated in targeted applications  Real benefit in providing visibility across extended supply chain  Need middleware applications to provide an analytical overlay for data  Key is not in obtaining data but in how organisations will use the data 22
  • 23. Global pilots   Automotive   Aerospace and Defence   Retail –  Sensor equipped processes –  Boeing and Airbus - safety, –  Improved on-shelf availability security, and MRO –  Reduced out-of-stocks –  Parts tracking –  Baggage tracking at Hong   Consumer Packaged Goods Kong, Narita, QATAR and   Mining Paris –  Gillette –  Asset management –  US DoD –  International Paper –  Warehouse management   Transport –  Product tracking   Financial services –  Postal and Courier –  Tracking physical goods   Government –  Airlines and airports –  Document tracking –  Tracking in cultural institutes –  Containers, pallets and totes –  Document tracking   Manufacturing   Health –  Access control –  Product life-cycle management –  Drug authentication –  Libraries –  Patient safety –  US DoD and UK MOD –  Safety –  Tracking hazardous materials –  Environmental sensing (1) 1 billion cars each with 100 sensors generating data a 6.7 tbps (2) Each new A380 jetliner will contain 10,000 RFID tags 23
  • 24. Contact information; Dr Clive Macmillan-Davies Booz Allen Hamilton (Australia) Ltd Level 7, 12 Moore Street Canberra City ACT 2601 Tel +61 (0)2 6279 1951 Fax +61 (0)2 6279 1990 Mob +61 (0)438 670 859 24