UMID (Unique Material Identifier): Difference between revisions
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The UMID is targetted at Machines, not Humans! | The UMID is targetted at Machines, not Humans! | ||
==Why | ==Why do we need UMIDs next to GTINs?== | ||
, can be | GTIN (Global Trade Identification Number) is a GS1 licenced identifier for indentifing trade items. GTINs provide trade item identification in the whole supply chain and can be assigned on multiple levels: | ||
* Pallet (e.g pallet with 512 consumer units) | |||
* Display (e.g. mixed Christmas floor display with 5 products) | |||
* Case (e.g. carton, tray used as handling unit, can be unboxed in the store or can be used as a shelf ready packaging) | |||
* Multi-pack (either mixed multi-pack like beer gift pack with 5 types of beer or single multi-pack like bundle of 6 bottles of Cola) | |||
* Each (consumer unit) | |||
There are two reasons tot GTINs are not suited to exchange sustainability data across the value network | |||
* GTINs do not represent a product variant. So GTIN stays the same in many situations where the bill of materials is adjusted for a product. Example is the bottle is made of PET en is made of 100% virgin material. The bottle is replace with a version that has 37% recycled content. | |||
* GTINs are only available in the finished good part of the value chain. Starting with consumer units with a barcode. Globally unique identifiers are also required for more upstream time types that usually have no branded individual packaging. Items like: raw materials, packaging components, food components, subassemblies, semi-finished goods. | |||
==Why UUID Based?== | ==Why UUID Based?== |
Revision as of 10:38, 24 January 2024
What is a UMID?
UMID (Unique Material Identifier) is a UUID based identifier (example: 2b66317b-6c2e-4ece-a3ee-ad52461bba8) for identifying a unique production variant.
UMIDs can be used to identify any product variant of a physical item in the value chain:
- Production Materials (part, food component, packaging component)
- Semi-finished goods
- Finished goods (consumer & professional good)
- Trade units (Case, carton, tray)
- Handling units (pallet, dolly)
The UMID is targetted at Machines, not Humans!
Why do we need UMIDs next to GTINs?
GTIN (Global Trade Identification Number) is a GS1 licenced identifier for indentifing trade items. GTINs provide trade item identification in the whole supply chain and can be assigned on multiple levels:
- Pallet (e.g pallet with 512 consumer units)
- Display (e.g. mixed Christmas floor display with 5 products)
- Case (e.g. carton, tray used as handling unit, can be unboxed in the store or can be used as a shelf ready packaging)
- Multi-pack (either mixed multi-pack like beer gift pack with 5 types of beer or single multi-pack like bundle of 6 bottles of Cola)
- Each (consumer unit)
There are two reasons tot GTINs are not suited to exchange sustainability data across the value network
- GTINs do not represent a product variant. So GTIN stays the same in many situations where the bill of materials is adjusted for a product. Example is the bottle is made of PET en is made of 100% virgin material. The bottle is replace with a version that has 37% recycled content.
- GTINs are only available in the finished good part of the value chain. Starting with consumer units with a barcode. Globally unique identifiers are also required for more upstream time types that usually have no branded individual packaging. Items like: raw materials, packaging components, food components, subassemblies, semi-finished goods.
Why UUID Based?
A UUID is unique by definition, also unique over time (generated, so no risk that someone by accident re-uses 324234 or 010). See how this work?, UUID generator No need for a central registry! Still never a double identifier. UUIDs are also Licence free.
What is de UMID allocation rule?
Very simple rule: A new UMID on every change in the Bill of Materials (in other words, a new ID for every new production variant) {GTIN can stay the same}