Traditionally, automatic identification and data capture (AIDC) products, or
auto-ID as they are commonly referred to, have been the staple of specialist
distributors and resellers. However, with distributors Ingram Micro, Interface
Solutions and Midwich all launching dedicated auto-ID divisions this year, it
appears that what was once viewed as a niche market is quickly gaining impetus
among the IT channel.
Technologies that typically sit under the AIDC umbrella include barcodes, radio
frequency identification (RFID), biometrics, magnetic strips, optical character
recognition, smartcards and voice recognition.
Auto-ID products share the common purpose of identifying, tracking, recording,
storing and communicating business, personal or product data.
Although most people will not have heard of AIDC, examples are all around us.
Perhaps the simplest, most visible example is at a supermarket in the form of
barcoding.
Another example is a credit card. Every time a card is swiped, the digitally
stored data on the magnetic strip is read by an electronic reader. London
Underground passengers who use Oyster cards are also using auto-ID in the form
of smartcards.
So with auto-ID already fairly prevalent, where are the growth opportunities for
resellers?
Room to grow
According to Alex Ward, commercial director at
Midwich,
the big growth opportunity exists around mobile auto-ID solutions.
“Traditionally, auto-ID products have been adopted by supermarkets and
warehousing and logistics firms. However, with the advent of mobile products, it
has opened up the technology to practically any business in any vertical.”
Sukh Rayat, vice president at
Avnet
Technology Solutions Europe, agreed: “Mobile computing is the next evolution
in auto-ID and resellers must get into this market.”
Clive Fearn, marketing manager for supply chain and the postal market at auto-ID
printer vendor
Zebra,
said: “Mobility is a huge opportunity for our channel partners. We call it the
mobile explosion. If I didn’t have a family and a mortgage I would set myself up
as a provider of mobile auto-ID solutions.”
VAR
Solidox
started out in 2001 as an auto-ID reseller, but found that just dealing in
auto-ID was too niche so it started to offer IT and AV products as well.
Ross Haselhurst, director of Solidox, told CRN: “Since the evolution of
mobile devices, the growth opportunity is in mobile auto-ID solutions. What you
can do now with just a handheld device is amazing. The price has also come down,
which is helping to open up the market. You can buy a mobile phone with
Bluetooth for less than £400 now and barcode scanners can work with Bluetooth
mobile phones.”
But why the sudden interest in auto-ID from IT distributors?
Martin Smith, auto-ID business manager at
Interface,
told CRN: “Distributors are looking at the auto-ID space now because
there is less margin erosion in auto-ID compared with IT hardware and because a
convergence is taking place between traditional auto-ID products and new
technology. Smartphones can talk to auto-ID printers, for example.”
There are three networks on which auto-ID mobile devices can work: a wireless
personal area network (WPAN); a wireless LAN (WLAN); and a wireless wide area
network (WWAN).
“The growth is driven by the fact that Wi-Fi is available pretty much everywhere
now,” said Smith. “The opportunities for auto-ID products are very diverse.”
Channelling the benefits
According to Fearn, the attraction for the channel is very clear. “Auto-ID
products carry significant margins - a lot more than traditional tin. VARs can
make money on the hardware, software, peripherals, sales and support, but
auto-ID is a different type of sale for a VAR - it is a solution sale so they
will need to understand their customers’ pain.”
Avnet spotted the potential in the auto-ID space in 2006 when it acquired
European RFID distributor Printex.
“In the past few years auto-ID has been about barcodes and scanners, but the
market is changing. We offer bundles for resellers around applications for
specific sectors such as retail, transport and logistics. We want to educate
resellers about this market,” added Rayat.
Midwich has been planning its entry into the auto-ID space for the past 18
months.
“We decided to launch a dedicated division as it is a new area for the channel
and resellers will need a certain amount of hand-holding initially. They will
need us to work with them to find a bespoke package or application for their
customers. The new division had been planned for a long time to make sure we had
the right vendors, the right marketing and the right support. We wanted to make
sure we could offer resellers a whole solution - it would be no good if we could
just offer them a printer or scanner,” said Ward.
The new division went live last month with Zebra’s mobile printers, Cipherlab’s
handheld scanners and Wasp Technologies’ all-in-one auto-ID solution aimed at
SMEs.
Expansion plans
“VARs can now go to their customers and tell them they have a range of products
that will improve and enhance their business, make them more efficient and give
them a competitive edge,” said Ward.
The main sectors Midwich plans to focus on are health, transport, utilities and
local government but the beauty, according to Ward, is that most sectors “have
external mobility needs” these days.
“We want to be a major distributor in this space in the next two years. In the
first year of trading I hope to have achieved turnover of between £1m and £2m,”
revealed Ward.
He is also looking for between 250 and 300 resellers to join Midwich’s auto-ID
mobility community. “We’re not just giving resellers tools and leaving them to
get on with it; we want to work alongside them and help them ask the right
questions to open the right doors.”
Smith, who previously worked for Zebra, is also looking to turn Interface into a
big player in the auto-ID space. “We want to be well positioned for the
continued growth and convergence in this sector, particularly in field mobility
where mobile printing continues to grow and out-perform the market norm.
Interface has realised that a specialist and focused team is required to make
auto-ID a success as it requires a different mindset to selling traditional IT
hardware,” said Smith.
Smith wants to recruit new vendors, particularly in the scanning side of
auto-ID, and new resellers.
Moving forward
“Transport and logistics are areas that are investing in mobile terminals,
printers and GPS handheld devices, but postal/delivery services is also a big
market. New verticals that vendors are expecting to take off are hospitality and
health,” he added.
Pierre Lams, founder of VAR
Handheld
PCs, said: “We’re taking advantage of the increased functionality of smart
devices. Through our hand-e-pix software customers can capture an image on their
handheld device, pinpoint the image’s location and feed the data back to their
office.”
“We are not an auto-ID reseller, but we use wireless devices such as PDAs to
capture data and automate it in the field,” said Lams.
Aside from the opportunity in mobility, RFID is another area of auto-ID that
many predict will grow.
Ian Smith, chief executive of the AIDC European Centre of Excellence, said: “As
Europe defines a European policy and as the world comes together on many issues,
we feel RFID will grow rapidly. Governments are seeing these technologies as the
missing link in IT.”
Peter Harrup, chairman of
IdTechEx,
explained further: “Radio frequency regulations are more of a mess in Europe
than anywhere else in the world, but they are being cleared up. RFID is around a
$5bn (£2.5bn) business worldwide, but will be worth $25bn in five years’ time. A
big opportunity exists for resellers around RFID cards that work from a
distance. The Chinese are investing in a billion cards for secure access to the
Olympic games.
“At the moment, 85 per cent of barcodes are printed directly onto products and
the first products with RFID tags printed directly on them are coming out now.
This also presents a big opportunity for resellers,” added Harrup.
Interface
sets up auto-ID unit
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