Pricing Accuracy Through Wireless Portable Printing

Posted November 11, 2009

Zebra Mobile PrintersChallenge
One of America’s largest retailers faces a daily challenge of maintaining accurate pricing of all merchandise across its entire chain of stores.

Further complicating the task is that the prices of more than 1000 products change every week, and up to five percent of the company’s inventory changes in any given month. As recently as the early 1990s, these changes were sent via fax or e-mail and were printed out by store managers at each location. A night shift was required to print out appropriate shelf labels, canvass the store to put these labels on corresponding shelves, and manually update pricing information in the store’s main computer for the check-out terminals. For the average store, these tasks required 20 employees to work six hours after the store closed.

“Every week we’d forfeit nearly 20 percent of our profits from each promotion through the cost of setting up for the sale,” recalled the chain’s operations manager. “Even after spending all of this time and money, human error was nearly out of control. The price of merchandise on the shelf frequently didn’t match the price at checkout. Our customers were frustrated, which was compromising customer loyalty and company reputation.”

Solution
To correct these problems, the retail chain adopted a corporate-wide pricing network with frame-relay host-to-store communication; a wireless, 2.4 GHz frequency-hopping LAN in every store, and network addressable Zebra® portable mobile printers to move the operation onto the floor.

Today, the company uses a team of price checkers to update prices and ensure that shelf labels match checkout counter prices. Each price checker is armed with a small handheld terminal capable of scanning existing shelf labels and a Zebra portable mobile printer that wirelessly connects both devices to the store’s network.

Application
Only an hour before the store opens, each price checker is given an area of the store to update. The name or product number of the item to update appears on the terminal screen, and the user simply scans the existing bar coded shelf label. The terminal and printer send a confirmation message to the host system, and the printer automatically prints the new shelf label to replace the old one. If the product is not the one with the new price, the terminal will return an error and ask the user to scan another item. The system is programmed to pick the route that requires minimal time for each checker and enables him or her to complete the task in less than 45 minutes.

Result
“What once took nearly 120 man-hours to complete while the store was earning zero revenue now takes two or three hours, and our accuracy is flawless,” noted the operations manager. “Not only are our customers assured of getting the price they expected from shelf to check-out, but they are also assured of the lowest price because we aren’t wasting time and money manually maintaining price accuracy.”

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