GS1 Us Celebrates 40 Years Of The Barcode And Adoption Of Global Standards For Conducting Business

LAWRENCEVILLE, N.J. (April 3, 2013) – Today marks the 40th anniversary that organizations united to adopt a universal way to conduct business using GS1 Standards. Beginning with a U.P.C. (Universal Product Code) barcode, the GS1 System of Standards has set the foundation for a technological revolution that has changed the way companies, from manufacturers to retailers, conduct business around the world. Now, more than five billion GS1 barcodes are scanned every day.

In the 40 years since their adoption, GS1 Standards have grown into a global system, used by more than two million companies doing business in 150 countries across 25 industries, including apparel and general merchandise, fresh foods, consumer packaged goods, grocery, foodservice, healthcare, and defense. Introduced to speed the supermarket checkout process, the grocery retail industry was the first champion of standards in 1973. Today, supply chains representing nearly every sector in the world rely on GS1 Standards for identifying, capturing, and sharing information about goods, services, locations, and more in real-time. Barcodes and Electronic Product Code (EPC) enabled radio frequency identification (RFID) have evolved to capture a broad range of information to drive supply chain visibility.

“Trading partners use our standards to share many complex pieces of data globally in order to transact business, and they need to be able to automate these business processes to reduce cost, human error, or improve safety and interoperability of systems,” said Bob Carpenter, president and chief executive officer of GS1 US. “For example, manufacturers and distributors must communicate product information and company location, at minimum. A common language and globally accepted standards are essential for trading partners to be able to understand each other, conduct business one way around the world, and collaborate efficiently.”

As one of 111 GS1 member organizations around the world, GS1 US brings together  stakeholders including manufacturers, distributors, retailers, providers, customs organizations, regulators, and industry groups to agree on standards that make both supply and demand chain operations faster, safer, more effective, less complex, and less costly. GS1 Standards are user-driven, neutral, and voluntary, allowing stakeholders to:

  • Provide a common, globally accepted language for the exchange of information
  • Identify, capture, and share information automatically and accurately
  • Produce hyper efficiency for supply chains
  • Reveal information vital to product visibility, traceability, patient safety, and consumer safety, uniquely identifying items around the world
  • Manage inventory more efficiently
  • Provide data accuracy and speed point of purchase for consumers
  • Gather information for accurate and immediate reporting
  • Comply with regulatory requirements impacting their business

Carpenter added, “The standards we’ve helped organizations implement over the last 40 years will drive supply chain visibility into the future, and we will continue to evolve with the industries we serve to keep pace with the changing business landscape. GS1 US is working with our members to shape the future – particularly as commerce is heavily influenced by omni-channel, and consumers demand for empowered mobile technology.  Data – big and small – will become the key to succeeding in the hyperconnected world, and standardizing this data for consumers, trading partners, and regulators, represents a big opportunity. GS1 US will continue to bring industries together to develop and implement standards that address key business challenges now and for many years ahead.”

Building on its commitment of bringing industries together to facilitate collaboration, GS1 US will recognize the 40th anniversary at its annual conference, GS1 Connect 2013, June 10 – 13, at the JW Marriott, San Antonio Hill Country Resort & Spa in San Antonio, Texas. Experts from more than 50  top companies in the grocery, retail, foodservice, and healthcare industries, including The Coca-Cola Company, Kellogg, The Kroger Company, Mercy, Target, and Tyson Foods will share best practices for leveraging GS1 Standards and address the most relevant business process needs of each sector.

For more information about the GS1 US 40th anniversary, visit www.gs1us.org/40-years. To learn more about GS1 US and GS1 Connect 2013, visit www.gs1us.org.

About GS1 US®
GS1 US, a member of GS1, is an information standards organization that brings industry communities together to solve supply-chain problems through the adoption and implementation of GS1 Standards. More than 200,000 businesses in 25 industries rely on GS1 US for trading-partner collaboration and for maximizing the cost effectiveness, speed, visibility, security and sustainability of their business processes. They achieve these benefits through solutions based on GS1 global unique numbering and identification systems, barcodes, Electronic Product Code-based RFID, data synchronization, and electronic information exchange. GS1 US also manages the United Nations Standard Products and Services Code® (UNSPSC®). www.GS1US.org

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