Researchmoz presents this most up-to-date research on"RFID Forecasts, Players and Opportunities 2012-2022".The report focuses primarily on quantitative market metrics in order to characterize the growth and evolution of the Remote Patient Monitoring Market.
This report is the summation of extensive research over twelve years including interviews with RFID adopters and solution providers in the various applicational RFID markets, giving an unprecedented level of insight into the total RFID industry and what is really happening. Purchasers receive an electronic PDF and (optional) printed copy of this report, a separate functional spreadsheet of the forecasts, and access to report updates throughout the year. Ten year forecasts are given split in many ways, with more than 190 tables and figures.
To Know More About This Report With TOC Visit: http://www.researchmoz.us/rfid-forecasts-players-and-opportunities-2012-2022-report.html
In 2012 the value of the entire RFID market will be $7.67 billion, up from $6.51 billion in 2011. This includes tags, readers and software/services for RFID cards, labels, fobs and all other form factors. It includes passive and active RFID.
In retail, RFID is seeing rapid growth for apparel tagging - that application alone demands 1 billion RFID labels in 2012. RFID in the form of tickets used for transit will demand 500 million tags in 2012. The tagging of animals (such as pigs, sheep and pets) is now substantial as it becomes a legal requirement in many more territories, with 294 million tags being used for this sector in 2012. This is happening in regions such as China and Australasia. In total, 3.98 billion tags will be sold in 2012 versus 2.93 billion in 2011. Most of that growth is from passive UHF RFID labels, however, at that frequency suppliers are still barely profitable so far.
View Related Report At : http://www.researchmoz.us/publisher/gbi-research-2.html
1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1.1. How governments drive most of the market
1.2. Non-government successes
1.3. Continued recession-proof rapid growth
1.4. Strange behaviour
1.5. Technical trends
1.6. Favourite RFID frequency
1.7. Watch the BRICS
1.8. Russia
1.9. China
1.10. Today's leaders continue to excel
1.11. Wider still and wider
1.12. Analysis of cumulative number of RFID projects analysed
1.13. Market projections 2012-2022
1.14. Rapid growth
1.15. RFID during turmoil in the global economy
1.16. Contactless smart cards dominate by value
1.17. RFID Forecasts by tag location - passive tags
1.18. RFID forecasts by tag location - active and battery assisted tags
1.19. RFID will not be big in China, it will be huge
1.20. Lessons from the last ten years
1.21. Pallet/case tagging
1.22. Drugs
1.23. Airline Baggage
1.24. Retail apparel, item level
1.25. RFID cards, tickets and NFC
1.26. Animals
1.27. Logistics, Asset Tracking, Manufacturing
1.28. Follow governments
1.29. Active RFID and RTLS comes to the fore
1.30. Billion dollar niches, sometimes with little competition
1.31. New technology
1.32. Impediments to the growth of RFID markets
2. INTRODUCTION
2.1. Definitions
2.1.1. RFID
2.1.2. Chipless/printed RFID
2.1.3. Passive and active RFID
2.2. Tags have different shapes
2.3. The RFID value chain
2.4. Where tags are placed
2.5. The show so far - 1945 to 2012
2.5.1. Cumulative sales by applicational category
2.5.2. Cumulative sales active vs passive
2.5.3. Cumulative sales chip vs chipless
2.5.4. Dominant RFID chip suppliers
2.6. Historic RFID tag sales 2005 to 2012
2.6.1. Progress in 2005
2.6.2. Progress in 2006
2.6.3. Progress in 2007
2.6.4. Progress in 2008
2.6.5. Progress in 2009
2.6.6. Progress in 2010
2.6.7. Progress in 2011
2.7. Ultimate potential
2.7.1. Potential for different applications
2.7.2. Tag price sensitivity at highest volumes
2.7.3. Price sensitivity curve for RFID (adoption curve)
2.8. Legal push
2.9. Demand pull
2.10. Constraints on market growth
2.11. Impediments to highest volume RFID
For More Information Kindly Contact:
Tel:+1-518-618-1030
Toll Free: 866-997-4948
State Tower
90 State Street, Suite 700
Albany, NY 12207
United States
Email: sales@researchmoz.us
WebSite: http://www.researchmoz.us/
Blog: http://researchmoz.blogspot.com
This report is the summation of extensive research over twelve years including interviews with RFID adopters and solution providers in the various applicational RFID markets, giving an unprecedented level of insight into the total RFID industry and what is really happening. Purchasers receive an electronic PDF and (optional) printed copy of this report, a separate functional spreadsheet of the forecasts, and access to report updates throughout the year. Ten year forecasts are given split in many ways, with more than 190 tables and figures.
To Know More About This Report With TOC Visit: http://www.researchmoz.us/rfid-forecasts-players-and-opportunities-2012-2022-report.html
In 2012 the value of the entire RFID market will be $7.67 billion, up from $6.51 billion in 2011. This includes tags, readers and software/services for RFID cards, labels, fobs and all other form factors. It includes passive and active RFID.
In retail, RFID is seeing rapid growth for apparel tagging - that application alone demands 1 billion RFID labels in 2012. RFID in the form of tickets used for transit will demand 500 million tags in 2012. The tagging of animals (such as pigs, sheep and pets) is now substantial as it becomes a legal requirement in many more territories, with 294 million tags being used for this sector in 2012. This is happening in regions such as China and Australasia. In total, 3.98 billion tags will be sold in 2012 versus 2.93 billion in 2011. Most of that growth is from passive UHF RFID labels, however, at that frequency suppliers are still barely profitable so far.
View Related Report At : http://www.researchmoz.us/publisher/gbi-research-2.html
1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1.1. How governments drive most of the market
1.2. Non-government successes
1.3. Continued recession-proof rapid growth
1.4. Strange behaviour
1.5. Technical trends
1.6. Favourite RFID frequency
1.7. Watch the BRICS
1.8. Russia
1.9. China
1.10. Today's leaders continue to excel
1.11. Wider still and wider
1.12. Analysis of cumulative number of RFID projects analysed
1.13. Market projections 2012-2022
1.14. Rapid growth
1.15. RFID during turmoil in the global economy
1.16. Contactless smart cards dominate by value
1.17. RFID Forecasts by tag location - passive tags
1.18. RFID forecasts by tag location - active and battery assisted tags
1.19. RFID will not be big in China, it will be huge
1.20. Lessons from the last ten years
1.21. Pallet/case tagging
1.22. Drugs
1.23. Airline Baggage
1.24. Retail apparel, item level
1.25. RFID cards, tickets and NFC
1.26. Animals
1.27. Logistics, Asset Tracking, Manufacturing
1.28. Follow governments
1.29. Active RFID and RTLS comes to the fore
1.30. Billion dollar niches, sometimes with little competition
1.31. New technology
1.32. Impediments to the growth of RFID markets
2. INTRODUCTION
2.1. Definitions
2.1.1. RFID
2.1.2. Chipless/printed RFID
2.1.3. Passive and active RFID
2.2. Tags have different shapes
2.3. The RFID value chain
2.4. Where tags are placed
2.5. The show so far - 1945 to 2012
2.5.1. Cumulative sales by applicational category
2.5.2. Cumulative sales active vs passive
2.5.3. Cumulative sales chip vs chipless
2.5.4. Dominant RFID chip suppliers
2.6. Historic RFID tag sales 2005 to 2012
2.6.1. Progress in 2005
2.6.2. Progress in 2006
2.6.3. Progress in 2007
2.6.4. Progress in 2008
2.6.5. Progress in 2009
2.6.6. Progress in 2010
2.6.7. Progress in 2011
2.7. Ultimate potential
2.7.1. Potential for different applications
2.7.2. Tag price sensitivity at highest volumes
2.7.3. Price sensitivity curve for RFID (adoption curve)
2.8. Legal push
2.9. Demand pull
2.10. Constraints on market growth
2.11. Impediments to highest volume RFID
For More Information Kindly Contact:
Tel:+1-518-618-1030
Toll Free: 866-997-4948
State Tower
90 State Street, Suite 700
Albany, NY 12207
United States
Email: sales@researchmoz.us
WebSite: http://www.researchmoz.us/
Blog: http://researchmoz.blogspot.com