Retail Numbering Systems |
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When allocating numbers in a retail environment for products (PLU/SKU), Customers or even clerks, there are
two important considerations which can save a massive amount of time and inconvenience later, if care is taken in the beginning. These are:-
All items sold in a retail environment are identified by a unique number. These numbers are sometimes called PLU numbers SKU numbers Product Numbers etc, but these are all essentially the same thing; a unique number used to identify the product. For many years now, almost all packaged goods include a barcode printed on the packaging. Barcodes are simply machine readable numbers. The advantages to retailers of these barcodes include:-
For many retailers, however not all products the sell have barcode numbers. Such products might be made by small manufacturers that do not have exclusive barcodes, or they may be items made to order such as hamburgers or pizzas. These items that don't have barcodes, will need to have a product number allocated by the store, and it is important to allocate these numbers in a way that the numbers never conflict or duplicate product numbers that may appear in product packaging. Even if a retailer sells nothing that has printed barcodes on the packaging, and does not plan to do so, it is wise to allocate product numbers in a manner that won't conflict, because at some time in the future, they may extend their product range to include items with barcodes, and when that time comes, then existing products which do conflict would all need to have their product codes changed, This would involve a great deal of work. Fortunately, avoiding conflicts is easy. Product barcodes printed on packaging, use a barcode symbology (language) called UPC/EAN. Barcode symbologies are like languages, and they each have different features. If creating your own product labels, you could use any symbology you wish. In retail environments however, UPC/EAN has been adopted as the standard and compliance with the standards is a normally required if a manufacturer wishes to have their product distributed through normal retail channels. If you manufacture packets of widget, and the barcode number on the packaging is the same as for a can of Coca Cola, then you would have a great deal of difficulty finding retailers to sell the product or wholesalers to distribute the produce. In reality, manufacturers are forced to comply with the standards. Actually UPC is a compatible subset of EAN which is used in the US. Other countries use EAN. These barcodes are either 8 or 13 digits long (12 for some UPC) and this number is divided into three parts as follows:-
Looking at the GS1 Prefix List you can see that, for example, a GS1 prefix of 560 indicates Portugal, 775 indicates Peru, 865 indicates Mongolia etc. Management of the remaining digits in the UPC/EAN barcode is carried out locally by GS1 Member Organisations in over 100 countries. When a manufacturer needs a range of barcode numbers to use on their packaging, they apply to their local GS1 Member Organisations for a range of numbers to be allocated. Naturally a take-away food shop would not want to bother contacting their local GS1 Member Organisations to allocate a product code for their hamburgers. Nor would the GS1 Member Organisation be interested in doing so. Of course if a bakery was making pies that were sold in a range of retail stores, then they would want to have a unique barcode number allocated and would need to contact their local GS1 Member Organisation. In the GS1 Prefix List you will see that there are several ranges called "Restricted distribution (MO defined)". While this might sound obscure, it means that the sequence of numbers beginning in this range will never be allocated to a manufacturer as a standard barcode number, and that these ranges can be safely used for other purposes. The previous description by EAN International for the range 20-29 was "Reserved for In Store Use". In other words, if all codes you allocate begin with the number "2" then you can be certain that this number will never be duplicated on the packaging for any other product. Start your numbers with a '2', and are safe from number conflicts. Taking this one step further, the same barcode scanner that is used to sell products, can also be used for other purposes. For example:-
In SELLmatix Point of Sale, the configuration of barcode prefixes is handled in Barcode Scanner Config on The Tools Menu. SELLmatix also supports a number of other techniques to achieve the same objective, which can be used where you already have customer, clerk and product numbers allocated and it is inconvenient to change. |
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