What We Offer
USTS delivers EAS pedestal installation, tag and label selection, RFID reader design, asset registration workflows, inventory integration, and dashboard reporting tailored to your operational model.
Our RFID asset tracking Oman solutions help retailers, warehouses, hospitals, and industrial facilities reduce shrinkage while improving item-level visibility. USTS combines EAS for exit-based theft prevention with RFID for continuous inventory intelligence, giving teams cleaner data and faster decisions.
For many clients, the win is not just loss prevention. The same deployment can improve stock accuracy, speed cycle counts, reduce search time for critical assets, and support better replenishment planning across multiple branches or storage areas.

USTS delivers EAS pedestal installation, tag and label selection, RFID reader design, asset registration workflows, inventory integration, and dashboard reporting tailored to your operational model.
Our projects include hard and soft tags, handheld and fixed RFID readers, inventory automation, exception alerts, API integration with ERP or POS platforms, and multi-site reporting. Many warehouse clients see counts completed in minutes instead of days.
We start with process mapping and shrink analysis, then define tag strategy, reader positions, and software integration requirements. After installation, the USTS team validates read accuracy, trains staff, and tunes reporting to match operational KPIs.
USTS brings local deployment experience, multi-site rollout support, and an integration-first mindset that helps the system work with your actual inventory process instead of sitting beside it.
We review current shrink patterns, inventory movement, SKU profiles, and site layouts to shape the right tagging and reader approach.
The team defines label strategy, reader placement, alert rules, and reporting outputs for stores, warehouses, or healthcare sites.
USTS installs the hardware, links the system to business platforms, and verifies data flow from read event to dashboard.
We train staff on tagging, exception handling, inventory routines, and reporting so adoption sticks after go-live.
Projects are typically phased so high-value categories or high-loss locations go first, reducing disruption while proving ROI early.
Ongoing support covers reader tuning, tag supply planning, dashboard refinement, and expansion into new branches or storage zones.
Retail teams use EAS to cut theft and RFID to improve replenishment, shelf availability, and branch-level stock visibility.
Hospitals track mobile equipment, manage inventory in sensitive areas, and reduce time spent locating high-value assets.
Warehouses and distribution centers use RFID for faster receiving, picking, dispatch validation, and audit trails.
Manufacturers apply RFID to tools, WIP inventory, and serialized assets to reduce manual handoffs and reporting delays.
RFID implementation consistently elevates inventory accuracy from a typical 65-75% baseline to 99%+. Cycle counts that previously took three days can be completed in under an hour with handheld sleds.
With real-time stock visibility, retailers can confidently offer "Buy Online, Pick Up In Store" (BOPIS) services, preventing canceled orders and lost customer trust due to ghost inventory.
EAS combined with RFID exception reporting reduces internal and external theft, providing a measurable reduction in unknown loss within the first year of deployment.
Acousto-Magnetic (AM) systems operate at 58 kHz and are excellent for wide aisles and environments with heavy metal interference, commonly used in electronics and hardware stores. Radio Frequency (RF) operates at 8.2 MHz, favored by apparel retailers for its flat, easily integrated paper tags.
Passive UHF RFID tags have no battery and draw power from the reader, making them cost-effective (cents per tag) for high-volume retail items. Active RFID tags contain batteries, broadcast continuously, and are used for tracking high-value, mobile assets like shipping containers or hospital beds over long distances.
Portal readers are installed at chokepoints like dock doors to register pallets automatically as they move. Overhead ceiling readers provide continuous, hands-free zone monitoring but require careful tuning to prevent cross-reads between adjacent zones.
EAS is focused on theft detection at exit points, while RFID gives broader tracking and inventory visibility throughout the asset lifecycle. Many organizations benefit from using both together.
ROI depends on shrink, labor savings, and inventory accuracy gains, but many clients see measurable value within six to twelve months.
Yes. We regularly connect RFID workflows with ERP, POS, WMS, and analytics tools so the data supports operational decisions.
Well-designed deployments can reach very high read accuracy, especially when tag choice, reader placement, and workflow design are validated during rollout.
Yes. USTS can standardize architecture, tags, dashboards, and training across multiple branches, stores, or facilities.
Talk with our Muscat team about scope, infrastructure readiness, project timeline, and support expectations.
Thinking about RFID for your warehouse or distribution centre in Oman? This guide breaks down the real costs, measurable benefits, and how to build an ROI case that holds up to scrutiny.
Read article