Solving RFID's image problems

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Image, Privacy, RFID, Symbol

You have been described as a hands-on operator, with marketing savvy and unflagging energy. Now, where does that energy come from?
[laughs] It comes from a passion for my work and my passion for the vision of the company. I genuinely believe in our company, vision and people. If you dig deep, it also comes from a great driver of very successful people: the fear of failure.

Your regular interactive meetings with top executives allow you to instil a learning culture at Symbol — how successful is that?
It's working well. Symbol is very much a start-up. It is almost newly founded because of such substantial changes in the company. There has to be consistent interactive communication on a global basis, so that (1) people understand where you are going and how you intend to get there, and (2) you listen carefully to what the challenges are in achieving those goals.

Making customer satisfaction part of employee compensation — how did your staff react to that?
Customer satisfaction and yearly performance are part of the bonus structure for everyone in the company. It's 25 percent of my yearly bonus, and that's not small.

When all is said and done, we put the money where our mouth is, and not many companies do that. It's only when you make it part of your employees' compensation that you will get the focus and attention you need on customer satisfaction.

In the past year, our customer satisfaction has gone up. In 2003, our customer satisfaction rating was 3.51 out of 5, and in 2004, it was 3.81 which is a fairly healthy jump year-on-year. Every year we dive deeply into the customer satisfaction survey results and come up with plans to address the top three to five functions that will improve customer satisfaction. We chart that throughout the year, measure our progress against that, and rerun the survey to see if we've improved.

Talkback

Mr Nuti says "an RFID tag is nothing more than a talking barcode. It's a serial number identifier that's transmitted, and nothing more than that."

His definition of RFID tag is unresonably narrow. Some variations of RFID tag have embedded re-writable memory capability inside, which could be updated without any notice of end users, or consumers. This is one of the reasons we concern about inappropriate use of RFID tag.

via Facebook 9 June, 2005 20:26
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