Archive for the ‘document management’ Category

Document Management Benefits Small Businesses

Friday, July 13th, 2007

Information. Your business depends on it. But can your employees easily locate the information they need when they need it? In most companies, documents are stored in a variety of places - on networks, on individual PC hard drives, CDs and zip drives, in file cabinets and in desk drawers. To complicate matters, the people who need to access these documents are often situated in different locations as well.

The answer for an increasing number of businesses - large and small - is a document management system. The following information can help you determine if a document management system is right for your business.

Understanding Document Management

Document management is an organizational method. More specifically, it is a technology-based means of storing documents. Documents (and sometimes images) are held in a single repository that simplifies managing and retrieving the files when necessary. Since organizations have diverse needs, systems are often custom designed.

How it Works

Document management typically begins with using a scanner to convert paper documents into digitized images. Once all files are electronic, it is easier to organize the information.

In the next step, sometimes referred to as indexing, the scanned image is typically given a name containing the date. The user is often asked to type in additional “tags” or indexing criteria. For instance, if you were scanning a customer’s financial plan, you might tag it with the name of the customer, the words “financial plan,” and the date. The system stores the scanned file by associating the image with the tags. Accurate tags make it easier to find the document you need.

When you need to retrieve a document from the system, you perform a search by entering one of the tags. The request is processed and the information is retrieved.Document management systems include security measures to ensure that only authorized users have access. These measures determine which documents certain people can read, and what actions or modifications they can make.

Benefits to the Business and its Employees

An effective document management system helps companies become better organized by making it easier to file, share, retrieve and secure information. Employees can also be more productive since they save time searching for business-critical information. A good document management system also facilitates collaboration, decision-making and the ability to build upon the work of others.

Digital files have functionality that is not possible with paper files. With a document management system in place, multiple people, even those working from home offices or the field, can access and work on files simultaneously.

Improved customer service is another important byproduct. Files are at the fingertips of all employees so that customer inquiries can be answered more quickly and effectively. There may also be a savings in printing and copying expenses and less need for onsite and offsite file storage space.

Document Management: Ripe For Savings

Friday, June 1st, 2007

According to a recent Xerox survey, four out of five technology professionals say document management is part of an effective IT strategy.

Xerox conducted the survey with International Communications Research (ICR) and found that close to 75 percent of participants said their offices were still using paper as a means of information management and storage. The company says that most IT departments are spending as much as 40 percent of their time and budget administering document technology, with 83 percent of those surveyed seeing it as an area ripe for improvement.

ICR conducted 250 telephone interviews with senior-level IT staff in businesses of 100 or more employees around the US between July 11 and Aug. 15 this year. Additionally, it found that one-third of participants feel their organizations don’t have a handle on the hard and soft costs associated with document technology.

The survey also found that implementing content management software, including online collaboration tools, was called out as a top priority. 50 percent of those surveyed predict that more hard copy documents will be scanned over the next three to five years, helping to save money and increase security through digital document archiving and storage.

The survey report cited document management, electronic records management, imaging capabilities and digital document archiving and storage as ways organizations could save time and money. More than half of the survey participants were from large businesses and said they believe outsourcing the management of document technology could help make their IT staff become more efficient and reduce costs.