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Scenario

Anti-Counterfeit Traceability

Traditional labels can't manage individual items — diversion and counterfeiting go undetected.

Solution Path

1

Generate unique identities

Generate a unique identity for each individual product

2

Establish data linkages

Link each identity to batch, channel, logistics, and order data

3

Scan-to-verify and trace

Enable authentication, traceability, and channel identification upon scanning

4

Business extensions

Extend to CRM, repurchase, and engagement scenarios based on business needs

5

Joint deployment

Deploy jointly with inkjet equipment and label systems

Expected Results

Item-level traceability
Anti-counterfeiting capability
Multi-tier distribution control

FAQ

What's the difference between one-thing-one-code and regular QR codes?

Regular QR codes are batch-level — all products of the same model show the same content. One-thing-one-code assigns a unique identity to each item for item-level tracking.

How does one-thing-one-code support anti-counterfeiting?

Unique codes bind product identity for consumer scan-to-verify; the system simultaneously tracks each item's channel flow from factory to retail, auto-alerting on anomalies.

Can it integrate with existing ERP, order, and warehouse systems?

Yes. Standard APIs enable linkage between codes and order, shipping, and warehouse data.

Can post-scan extend to membership or marketing?

Yes. The one-thing-one-code scan entry point can load membership registration, loyalty points, repurchase guidance, and interactive surveys.

How is a one-thing-one-code project typically phased?

Typically three phases: Phase 1 — coding and verification; Phase 2 — traceability and channel management; Phase 3 — marketing and consumer engagement. Each phase can launch independently.

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