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Microsoft Targets Second RFID Pilot at SMBs

At the EPCglobal show on Tuesday, Microsoft announced an RFID customer pilot with snack-food maker Jack Link’s Beef Jerky, a product supplier to Wal-Mart, Target and the U.S. Department of Defense. The company says the pilot is part of its plan to target its RFID offerings at SMBs (small to midsized businesses). Large turnkey players […]

Written By: Jacqueline Emigh
Sep 28, 2004
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At the EPCglobal show on Tuesday, Microsoft announced an RFID customer pilot with snack-food maker Jack Link’s Beef Jerky, a product supplier to Wal-Mart, Target and the U.S. Department of Defense. The company says the pilot is part of its plan to target its RFID offerings at SMBs (small to midsized businesses).

Large turnkey players are already working with enterprise customers, Alex Renz, RFID program manager at Microsoft Corp., said in an interview with eWEEK.com. Traditional Microsoft competitors Sun Microsystems Inc., IBM and Hewlett-Packard Co. are all in that space.

“But enterprises are only a small part of the RFID market,” Renz said. Wal-Mart, for example, works with 45,000 product suppliers, while the DOD (Department of Defense) works with 50,000 of them, he said.

SMBs are less likely than enterprises to run complex, heterogeneous network architectures and more likely to need the relative simplicity that Microsoft wants to provide, Renz said. Many smaller businesses, including Jack Link’s, are already Microsoft shops, anyway, he added.

The RFID pilot with Jack Link’s is the second that Microsoft has announced. The first was a test with Danish-based KiMS. Both of these customers are snack-food manufacturers, but Renz attributed this fact to pure coincidence.

Click here to read about Best Buy’s RFID pilot.

Microsoft does plan to start out with customers in the retail, consumer packaged goods and pharmaceutical markets, he said. “These markets are really hot right now, with the EPC standardization that’s going on.”

Essentially, however, Microsoft intends to build a “plain vanilla” RFID offering that is adaptable to many different vertical markets, Renz said.

As one of Wal-Mart’s smaller suppliers, Jack Link’s isn’t required to comply with the Wal-Mart mandate until 2006.

But Karl Paepke, vice president of operations at Jack Link’s, said he sees the pilot as a way to “leapfrog” from traditionally manual supply-chain practices into a strong competitive position that offers better visibility into manufacturing processes and distribution.

Read about the early days of Wal-Mart’s RFID trial in Texas by clicking here.

Microsoft is working with a different set of partners for the Jack Links’ and KiMS deployments. Partners for Jack Link’s include ABC Computers Inc., SATO America, SAMsys Technologies and Amery Dennison Corp.

Renz said Microsoft expects to build RFID functionality into ERP (enterprise resource planning) products including Microsoft’s Axapta 4.0, Navision, 5.0 and the next major release of Great Plains software. “There is [integration] work going on with BizTalk Server, too,” he told eWEEK.com.

Check out eWEEK.com’s Supply Chain Management & Logistics Center for the latest news and analysis of enterprise supply chains.

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