WhoshouldIsee Tracks Asset Tracking | Watermill Press
Back to Traceability

Asset Tracking

RFID & QR for Connected Identity. Built for Long-Term Use

Asset tracking focuses on maintaining reliable identification of long-lived, reusable, or high-value items over extended lifecycles.

Common Common Asset Tracking Challenges

Asset tracking programmes typically need to address:

Harsh operating conditions – abrasion, chemicals, outdoor exposure, or repeated cleaning

Long lifecycles – identities must remain readable for years, not months

Data continuity – asset history must persist across systems, owners, or locations

High cost of failure – lost or misidentified assets directly impact operations and capital

Retrofit constraints – traceability is often added to existing assets, not designed in from the start

Harsh operating conditions

Long lifecycles

Data continuity

High cost of failure

Retrofit constraints

Drivers Shaping Asset Traceability

Key drivers include:

Operational efficiency

Loss reduction

Reuse and circularity models

Audit and compliance requirements

Traceability Technology Basics - Asset Tracking

Asset traceability often requires:

RFID for automated, repeatable identification

Barcodes for visual identification and redundancy

RFID’s ability to retain and update information with the asset itself is often essential in these use cases.

Barcodes

Low cost, widely adopted, and effective where line-of-sight and manual interaction are sufficient

RFID

Enabling automatic identification, bulk reading, and interaction without direct visibility, even in complex environments

How Watermill Works with Asset Owners

Watermill supports asset owners by:

Supplying durable traceability labels

Advising on lifecycle identity strategies

Verifying performance before deployment

Supporting system integration

Acting as a long-term traceability partner