Dude, Where’s My Stuff? Sonaria Answers that Question with RFID
Welcome to this episode of The New Warehouse Podcast. Kevin chats with John Wirthlin from Sonaria, a solution under the Lowry umbrella, live from MODEX 2026. The conversation centers on shipment verification powered by RFID and how Sonaria is rethinking the operator experience. Instead of leading with technology, the focus is on business outcomes and usability on the floor.
Wirthlin walks through how their system simplifies receiving and shipping workflows, reduces costly errors, and delivers real-time visibility without adding complexity.
Operator-First Design Changes Adoption
Wirthlin makes it clear that most operations are not asking for more technology. As he explains, “we’re all about trying to understand the business outcome first.” Instead of overwhelming users with complex systems, the platform delivers only what operators need in the moment.
Many warehouse tools fail because they prioritize features over usability. Wirthlin highlights that “we’re trying to give an experience for the operator that’s operator-centric. And not technology-centric.” That distinction drives adoption. When systems mirror how work actually happens, training becomes almost unnecessary. Operators can move faster without second-guessing the system.
This also addresses a common industry gap. Many warehouses still rely on manual checks or fragmented tools. By simplifying the interface and focusing on context, Sonaria reduces friction. The result is faster onboarding, fewer errors, and stronger confidence on the floor.
RFID Visibility Solves the “Where’s My Stuff?” Problem
One question keeps coming up across industries. As Wirthlin puts it, “A lot of it’s all the same thing. Where’s my stuff?” That challenge spans everything from small electronics to forklifts. Companies want visibility, but they also need accuracy in real environments. RFID has matured, but misconceptions still linger. Some believe it cannot handle metal or complex layouts.
Sonaria approaches this differently. Rather than imposing a single solution, they evaluate each environment. Wirthlin explains, “We want to provide the right sensing technology for the right job.” That includes passive RFID, Bluetooth, and ultra-wideband when needed.
This flexibility matters because no two warehouses operate the same way. Layout, materials, and workflows all impact performance. By understanding movement patterns and constraints, Sonaria ensures the technology actually delivers value.
The outcome is more than tracking. It is actionable visibility. Operators know where items are, how they move, and whether processes are working as expected.
Preventing Costly Errors in Real Time
Shipment verification is where this approach becomes tangible. The system provides instant feedback as pallets are loaded. There is no delay, no guesswork, and no need for manual scans.
The biggest impact comes from error prevention. Wirthlin explains the core goal: “We want to make sure we’re not putting something on the wrong truck.” That single mistake can trigger returns, rework, and customer dissatisfaction.
The system also flags more nuanced issues. For example, it prevents refrigerated goods from being loaded onto non-refrigerated trailers. These errors are easy to miss but expensive to fix.
Speed is another advantage. As demonstrated, reads happen instantly. This eliminates bottlenecks and keeps workflows moving. Operators get real-time confirmation without slowing down.
Key Takeaways on RFID
- RFID shipment verification provides instant read speeds with no lag during loading
- System tracks expected vs. actual loads, including pallet counts and case quantities.
- Prevents mis-shipments by validating the correct truck, product type, and conditions
- Flags cold chain risks by identifying refrigerated vs. ambient mismatches
- Supports multiple sensing technologies, including passive RFID, BLE, and UWB
Listen to the episode and leave your thoughts in the comments.
Guest Information
For more information on Sonaria, click here.
To connect with John on LinkedIn, click here.
For more information about RFID, check out the podcasts below.
RFID in the Warehouse: Focus on Business Outcomes
