sexta-feira, 25 de abril de 2014

O RFID irá substituir o EAS?

Em recente texto divulgado na RFID Journal, uma importante questão foi endereçada: O RFID irá substituir o EAS?

Abaixo interessante conteúdo da matéria:



"When an EAS-enabled alarm sounds, it is generally too late to stop the loss from occurring. With RFID, a retailer has the opportunity to actually prevent loss. The key is to use RFID-generated data to develop a loss-prevention system. A store, for example, could set up the system to recognize anomalies that indicate a theft is likely to occur, such as when a shopper takes two identical items into a dressing room or performs a "shelf sweep," removing several products from a shelf quickly and simultaneously. The system could alert store personnel to keep an eye on the shopper, possibly preventing rather than merely detecting a theft."

Para a leitura da matéria completa, acesse: http://www.rfidjournal.com/articles/view?11535

Bruno Calaça
Editor do Blog Store Performance Brasil 

When an EAS-enabled alarm sounds, it is generally too late to stop the loss from occurring. With RFID, a retailer has the opportunity to actually prevent loss. The key is to use RFID-generated data to develop a loss-prevention system. A store, for example, could set up the system to recognize anomalies that indicate a theft is likely to occur, such as when a shopper takes two identical items into a dressing room or performs a "shelf sweep," removing several products from a shelf quickly and simultaneously. The system could alert store personnel to keep an eye on the shopper, possibly preventing rather than merely detecting a theft. - See more at: http://www.rfidjournal.com/articles/view?11535#sthash.JDgHsauD.dpuf
When an EAS-enabled alarm sounds, it is generally too late to stop the loss from occurring. With RFID, a retailer has the opportunity to actually prevent loss. The key is to use RFID-generated data to develop a loss-prevention system. A store, for example, could set up the system to recognize anomalies that indicate a theft is likely to occur, such as when a shopper takes two identical items into a dressing room or performs a "shelf sweep," removing several products from a shelf quickly and simultaneously. The system could alert store personnel to keep an eye on the shopper, possibly preventing rather than merely detecting a theft. - See more at: http://www.rfidjournal.com/articles/view?11535#sthash.JDgHsauD.dpuf
When an EAS-enabled alarm sounds, it is generally too late to stop the loss from occurring. With RFID, a retailer has the opportunity to actually prevent loss. The key is to use RFID-generated data to develop a loss-prevention system. A store, for example, could set up the system to recognize anomalies that indicate a theft is likely to occur, such as when a shopper takes two identical items into a dressing room or performs a "shelf sweep," removing several products from a shelf quickly and simultaneously. The system could alert store personnel to keep an eye on the shopper, possibly preventing rather than merely detecting a theft. - See more at: http://www.rfidjournal.com/articles/view?11535#sthash.JDgHsauD.dpuf

Nenhum comentário:

Postar um comentário