Saturday, March 5, 2011

No Reward For Capture?

Recently, I was sent a link to this blog by Daniel Chalef on active document capture. He references an AIIM article where survey respondents rate their success or failure with quality and vendors. Both resources are well worth reading and available to the public. The blog discusses strategic ways to achieve an organizational benefit with document capture. There are a few practical examples I wanted to share.

What active documents do organizations still get in paper form? A frightening array, including contracts (from sales to loan applications), invoices and billing statements, checks, etc. Any of these document types can be electronic, and they probably all will be, all the time, sometime in the future. While we're holding our breath, it's a good idea to look at how we might treat all this paper.

Scan those contracts and make them part of whatever project, real estate deal, or program they relate to. While you might limit access to management, your intranet should be the place to hold those documents. Someone has to ensure the appropriate terms of service, and that's pretty easy to do with a searchable scanned file. Invoices can be scanned and presented directly in your accounting system, especially if your organization receives a number of the same invoices from the same contractors. You can even set up a field recognition feature to present the dollar amount right in the system, with the scan attached to the contractor record for reference. Checks should also be scanned and added to your accounts payable records.

So what do you do with the paper? Get rid of it... sometime. There are federal, state, municipal, industry, and organizational rules about that, and not every stakeholder treats scans as an approved substitute. That being said, as a rule of thumb, I would suggest that your paper documents have no practical use after the following fiscal year. In other words, paper files you received and scanned in 2009 can probably go away in 2011 without much fuss. Just make sure you take good care of your scans.