News | September 15, 2009

Market For Item-Level RFID In Fashion Apparel And Footwear Will Nearly Triple By 2014

RFID's ability to help apparel companies do more with less in the wake of economic downturn is driving an unprecedented surge in adoption throughout the sector.

Global sales of item-level RFID systems to apparel companies will essentially triple in size over the next five years, approaching $125M by the end of 2014.

"RFID's use in the apparel sector represents the greatest near-term opportunity for business improvements and fewest impediments to growth in the retail industry," says ABI Research's RFID practice director Michael J. Liard. "A quick, demonstrable ROI and key business metrics for adoption have been clearly established and the results of nearly all evaluations conducted have been compelling. As a result, market activity is brisk and promising, especially among early-adopter specialty apparel retailers."

According to a new Research Brief from ABI Research, item-level RFID systems have become a key competitive advantage and business process automation differentiator for apparel companies due to their ability to drive increased sales and facilitate significant labor cost reductions by providing improved inventory visibility.

Previously limited to a small number of large-volume pilot tests, adoption of item-level RFID is beginning to permeate throughout the apparel sector and is increasingly evolving into full-scale implementations. According to Liard, "While installations at Marks and Spencer in the UK, American Apparel in the US, and Charles Vögele in Switzerland remain the largest contributors to market growth, scores of companies are now in various stages of implementation. RFID in fashion apparel is undoubtedly here and now."

The new Research Brief, "RFID Item-Level Tagging in Fashion and Apparel" quantifies the potential for deployments of item-level tagging in the fashion apparel and footwear sector over the next five years and identifies some of the main forces currently driving market growth. Other topics discussed include recent technological and product innovation, results reported from recent pilot tests and deployments, key vendor evaluation criteria, and market opportunity by geographic region.

It forms part of the firm's RFID Research Service which also includes other Research Briefs, Research Reports, Market Data, ABI Vendor Matrices, ABI Insights, and analyst inquiry support.

About ABI Research
ABI Research provides in-depth analysis and quantitative forecasting of emerging trends in global connectivity. From offices in North America, Europe and Asia, ABI Research's worldwide team of experts advise thousands of decision makers through 25 research and advisory services. Est. 1990. For more information visit www.abiresearch.com.

SOURCE: ABI Research