AUTO ID
technologyreview
As more DCs automate their receiving operations,
suppliers risk steep fines if they don’t comply
with customers’ labeling requirements. Here are
some tips for staying out of trouble.
steps to
ensure bar-code 5
compliance
SLAP A SMUDGED BAR-CODE LABEL ON A CARTON
and the chances are pretty good that your customer will
slap a fine on you. That’s the reality for many suppliers
these days, particularly if they ship to large and medium-sized companies.
And it’s not just smudges suppliers have to worry
about. Today’s buyers have become downright picky
about the way their shipments are coded and labeled.
Not only do they want their suppliers to use a certain
type of bar-code symbol, which generally varies by
industry, but they’re also likely to mandate a specific
label format, type, and placement on a carton or pallet.
The penalties for failure to comply with the buyer’s
specifications can be steep. Jack Householder, a partner
in the firm Quad II Inc., says he knows of companies
that have been hit with fines as high as $10,000.
As for why customers have become so fussy about
their bar codes, you can blame automation. More and
more companies are turning to automated receiving
systems, which typically operate within very strict tolerances when it comes to reading codes. For instance, in
order for a fixed-position scanner to read a bar code on
a carton traveling down a conveyor, the label has to be
in a certain spot and the image crisp and clear.
Anything less is bound to slow operations and cost the
“If the receiving side has an automated system in
place, [it will] just kick out the boxes [it] can’t read,”
says Householder. “They then have to put the informa-
tion in manually. That’s how charges can add up so
quickly.”
How do you avoid paying those fines? We asked sev-
eral experts for advice. What follows are their recom-
mendations on ways to ensure bar-code compliance:
1Know exactly what the customer requires. Industries uch as automotive, health care, and retail have
adopted standardized symbologies for bar codes as well
as standards regarding label size and placement. But
that doesn’t mean suppliers can assume that meeting
those standards equates to compliance. Many customers in those industries still have their own individual requirements for label format and placement, says
Andy Verb, president of Bar Code Graphics Inc., a firm
that specializes in bar-code products and compliance
solutions.
“In the retail and automobile industries, there is no
one-size-fits-all [set of rules],” he reports.
Verb points out that most large retailers have created
guides or online portals that spell out the details of their