Implementing Electronic Records Management? Here Are 4 Things to Consider

A records management strategy is vital to the life cycle of your organization’s information. At an organizational level, a records management strategy governs how information is created, stored, shared, tracked and protected.

Electronic records management (ERM) software simplifies the application of this strategy, helping to manage the life cycle of business records without interfering with your line of business. A records management application supports the automatic enforcement of consistent, organization-wide records policies, simplifying compliance with federal, state and industry regulations.

What are some best practices for managing electronic records?

Once you’ve decided to make the switch to an ERM system, there are four important points to consider.

1. Develop an information governance strategy

Before switching to electronic records, it is essential to design a comprehensive information governance strategy. An information governance strategy explores the breadth of content an organization manages, how content is organized and who should have access to it.

A good governance structure:

  • Enables staff to work in the most efficient and effective way possible by giving them access to information when they need it.
  • Outlines which user groups have access to which record types, simplifying the actual application of appropriate security within the ERM system.
  • Takes into account any state or regulatory requirements for record access or retention.

“Records management is a critical component in information governance, and organizations need information professionals who can incorporate records retention and management principles into all storage media architectures, automated systems and emerging technologies,” says Allen Podraza, Director of Records Management & Archives for the American Medical Association.

2. Evaluate certified records management systems

When switching to an ERM system, you may want to look at systems that are certified, particularly those certified to meet a set of requirements outlined in the Department of Defense (DoD) 5015.2 standard. The Department of Defense has rigorous requirements for ensuring that records are properly organized and managed. The DoD 5015.2 standard outlines requirements for managing classified records and includes requirements to support the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Privacy Act and interoperability.

Unless an organization provides services to the United States Department of Defense or one of its components, it is not typically required to meet the DoD 5015.2 certification. However, an ERM system that has been certified to meet stringent requirements for organizing file structures — and reliably preserving data — likely offers some of of the best tools available for properly maintaining records.

3. Ensure the electronic document can be legally presented as an official record

Before you switch to an electronic system, you must ensure that the electronic document can be legally presented as the official record. To meet state regulations, it is often important that the ERM software is compatible with a wide range of hardware components, such as optical, tape and magnetic-based WORM (write once, read many) storage.

Depending on where you live, the requirements may differ. For example, state agencies in California are required to maintain records “created or stored as an official record” using a trusted system.

A trusted system must:

  • Utilize both hardware and media storage methodologies to prevent unauthorized additions, modifications or deletions during the approved life cycle of the stored information.
  • Be verifiable through independent audit processes ensuring that there is no plausible way for electronically stored information to be modified, altered, or deleted during the approved information life cycle.
  • Write at least one copy of the electronic document or record into electronic media that does not permit unauthorized additions, deletions, or changes to the original document and that is to be stored and maintained in a safe and separate location.
4. Track the actions taken on the document

To form a complete record of organization-wide activity, the ERM system should track every action taken on each document throughout its life cycle, including what information was added and deleted. These reports should not only track each action, but also when and by whom it was performed.

These reports can be run regularly or on an as-needed basis. This whole process can also be automated and reports emailed to the appropriate people on a schedule.

A log of actions performed on a record.
An ERM system can generate system-wide reports on user logins, audit activity, document modifications and more.

Continue Your Journey

Fast track your digital transformation with the Laserfiche Solution Marketplace

Looking to make Laserfiche your records management solution? Customers can get started streamlining regulatory processes, such as building permit applications and inspections, quicker than ever with the pre-built workflows offered through the Laserfiche Solution Marketplace.

Compare top enterprise content management (ECM) vendors on G2

Laserfiche offers records management features as part of a robust enterprise content management (ECM) system. Check out the G2 Grid® for Enterprise Content Management (ECM) and compare top vendors on the market.

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Get the ultimate records management guide

Learn more about selecting an electronic records management system for your organization by downloading the Ultimate Guide to Records Management.

Download the eBook: The Ultimate Guide to Records Management.

What is Enterprise Content Management?

What does ECM mean and why is it important?

An Enterprise Content Management (ECM) system enables organizations to securely manage content and information throughout its lifecycle. It enables unstructured information — such as Word documents, PDFs, emails and scanned images — to be securely stored and made accessible to authorized users.

From commercial supply chains to contract management, HR processes to government administration, the driving force behind implementing an ECM solution is to do business more efficiently. By eliminating dependence on paper documents and organizing unstructured information according to business needs, organizations can simplify and streamline work.

Top 5 Elements of ECM

Listening to our customers over the years, we’ve found consistent goals for implementing ECM. Customers commonly rely on ECM to:

  • Decrease dependence on paper and streamline business processes.
  • Drive better customer service and increase productivity.
  • Reduce organizational risk.

Leading ECM solutions, including Laserfiche, accomplish these goals and more. Here are 5 key elements of an ECM solution:

The five key elements of ECM: Capture documents digitally; store documents in a digital repository; retrieve documents regardless of device or location; automate document driven processes; secure documents and reduce organizational risk.

1. Capture documents digitally

Managing an organization’s content begins with the capture and importing of information into a secure digital repository. This can be any kind of document that is created, captured, stored, shared or archived, including:

  • Invoices from vendors.
  • Resumes from job applicants.
  • Contracts.
  • Correspondence.
  • Research reports.

A few methods of capturing these documents include:

  • Using electronic forms to make documents digital from the point of creation.
  • Scanning paper documents to be filed in a digital repository.
  • Managing natively digital content, including Microsoft Office documents, PDFs, photos and videos.
  • Automatically filing and categorizing documents from servers, shared devices and network drives.

Traditional methods of capturing documents require a great deal of effort and expense. Capturing documents in a digital repository eliminates many of the obstacles created by paper: labor-intensive duplication, slow distribution, misplaced originals and the inconvenience of retrieving files from offsite storage.

2. Store documents in a digital repository

With robust ECM systems, organizations can easily store any business-critical document in a digital repository, allowing users to:

  • Decide who can view, edit and create documents.
  • Classify and search for documents based on metadata
  • Organize documents within a flexible folder structure.

The benefits of enterprise content management go far beyond document storage. An ECM system also reduces the time, cost and complexity associated with managing documents that require retention schedules, throughout their life cycle, assisting in efforts to bolster regulatory compliance.

3. Retrieve documents, regardless of device or location

Once an organization’s records have been securely stored, you can:

  • Find any document using full-text search.
  • Identify specific words or phrases within document text, metadata, annotations and entry names.
  • Use preset search options to search by document creation date, the names of users who checked out documents and other metadata.

Enterprise content management software helps eliminate time spent searching for information, enabling employees to answer information requests from clients, citizens and auditors immediately. More than that, staff have instant access to the information required to make better decisions about issues that can your organization’s bottom line.

4. Automate document-driven processes

Automation helps organizations eliminate manual tasks — such as photocopying or even drag-and-dropping digital documents — to achieve greater results with fewer resources. Some ECM systems have digital automation features that can:

  • Automatically route documents to the right people at the right time.
  • Alert staff members when documents require their attention.
  • Recognize errors before they cause delays or make staff redo work.

Every day, businesses need purchase orders signed, records archived and employee vacation requests approved or denied. Automation moves these critical documents through the necessary steps of review and approval, in the order specified. The end result is processes that are more cost-efficient, streamlined and error-free.

5. Secure documents and reduce organizational risk

With strengthening compliance restrictions in a wide range of industries, organizations are increasingly using ECM systems to optimize records management practices and protect against risk. An enterprise content management system must provide customizable security settings to allow organizations to protect information from unauthorized access or modification. These settings should allow you to:

  • Restrict access to folders, documents, fields, annotations and other granular document properties as needed.
  • Monitor system login and logout, document creation and destruction, password changes and more.
  • Protect sensitive metadata by controlling access to information within individual folders, templates and fields.

Leading ECM solutions enable line of business departments to manage user access independently — which means sensitive HR information stays within the HR department, while private financial information stays within the finance department, even if the information is stored in the same repository.

What are some use cases for ECM?

An ECM can assist your organization in a variety of ways. Below are a few examples:

  • Accounts payable: Capture information from invoices and purchaser orders (POs), automate invoice matching and flag mismatches between invoices and POs.
  • Customer and client services: Provide secure, anytime access to documents customers and clients need with online portals hosting digital documents.
  • Remote and off-site work: Give those working from home or in the field the tools, content and services they need to do their jobs effectively.
  • Staffing and recruiting: Streamline approvals, paperwork, and everything else involved in bringing in new talent to your organization.
  • Information governance: Bolster your efforts to keep information secure and in compliance with a set of powerful records management tools.

Customer Spotlight: Learning Arts

Learn how Learning Arts, a company dedicated to the care of children with autism, leveraged ECM to share data about patients with their parents and behavior specialists in real-time to enhance care and programming.

Browse customer reviews of Laserfiche on G2

Get insights from real customers on why Laserfiche is a top choice for organizations looking to further their digital transformation with ECM.

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Continue your journey

As you can see, an ECM can help streamline a wide variety of processes. Below are some resources to help you continue exploring solutions to your business challenges.

Schedule a personalized Laserfiche demo

Most ECM platforms include a few of these 5 key elements, but category leaders — like Laserfiche — provide a complete ECM solution, helping your organization dramatically improve business processes. See first hand how Laserfiche can be your solution and schedule a demo.

Discover powerful solutions on the Laserfiche Solution Marketplace

Some of the more robust ECM systems, including Laserfiche, offer marketplaces for process templates you can use to jumpstart digital transformation initiatives. To learn more about the Laserfiche Solution Marketplace, watch the video below:

 

Explore Laserfiche’s 4 Steps to Innovation

Also be sure to check out the below infographic “Laserfiche 4 Steps to Innovation” to see how Laserfiche users can not only deploy solutions quickly, but get involved with a larger community of innovators.Infographic showing the Laserfiche's four steps to innovation: asking what needs to be automated, seeing how others use Laserfiche, downloading and using solutions and sharing with others.

Evaluate and shop for software more effectively with our buyer’s guide

To learn more about what enterprise content management is and how it works, download the ECM Software Buyer’s guide.

The ECM Software Buyer's Guide - Learn what enterprise content management is, why organizations need it and how to procure the right software for your workplace.

Check out the G2 Grid® for Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Comparing ECM systems? Compare the top vendors in the space with the G2 Grid® for Enterprise Content Management (ECM):

G2 Grid® for Enterprise Content Management (ECM) Systems


3 Top Records Management Challenges (and How to Solve Them)

Records management involves more than safely filing documents. Here are three top records management challenges organizations are facing today.

Making records easily accessible

Making records easier and faster to locate can be a challenge for most organizations, and especially large enterprises.

Organizations can simplify records searches by:

  • Digitizing records for viewing on computers, tablets or smartphones.
  • Applying metadata to records, so that they are instantly searchable by record type.
  • Use saved searches so it’s faster to locate the types of records you frequently search for.
Application window featuring the Laserfiche repository.
Digitizing records and storing them in an ECM repository makes information easily accessible on computers, tablets or smartphones.

Complying with retention schedules

Organizations have a wide range of records retention schedules to comply with based on their industry and the types of records they deal with. Regulatory agencies such as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and the US Department of Labor — among others — can impose strict fines on organizations that fail to follow the rules.

To meet these needs, organizations can enforce consistent, organization-wide records policies with an electronic records management system:

  • Auto-file newly created records according to industry regulations and corporate policies.
  • Set schedules for the retention, transfer and archival of records based on record type.
  • Group records in a series based on retention and disposition schedules.
Application screenshot showing a list of retention schedules.
Laserfiche can automatically retain, transfer and archive records based on the record type.

Preparing for audits

Organizations are frequently subject to audits as they manage records lifecycles. They need to prove to regulators that they retain records in compliance with retention schedules. An ECM system can bolster an organization’s efforts to prepare for an audit, with features that allow them to:

  • Monitor system events, such as login and logout, document creation and destruction, password changes and more.
  • Log user actions taken on smartphones and tablets.
  • Generate audit reports that specify what users changed within a system and when.

For example, investment advisory firm Hanson McClain easily prepares for audits by using Laserfiche records management tools to track the creation, deletion and modification of the documents stored in the repository. Even if a document is deleted, IT can still locate it, find out who deleted it and restore it in the repository.

Application window featuring audit trails.
Laserfiche can track every interaction with documents stored in the repository, including document creation, deletion and modification.

Managing risk for an entire organization can be challenging, but with a solid strategy and the right tools, you can be ready for whatever comes your way.

Looking to make Laserfiche your records management solution? Customers can get started streamlining regulatory processes, such as building permit applications and inspections, quicker than ever with the pre-built workflows offered through the Laserfiche Solution Marketplace.

To learn more about records management challenges organizations can overcome with ECM, get your complimentary copy of The Ultimate Guide to Records Management.

Download the eBook: The Ultimate Guide to Records Management.

How to Securely Email Documents with ECM

What does your organization do to prevent its emails from being hacked?

With massive email security breaches fresh in mind, many organizations share concerns that confidential email attachments can fall into the wrong hands. Here are three tips for using enterprise content management (ECM) software to securely email documents.

Emailing Documents Inside Your Organization

Email attachments can be vulnerable to theft or eavesdropping. If you need to share information with someone inside your organization, emailing a link to the document or folder in Laserfiche is a safe alternative to emailing a physical attachment. This ensures that the information being sent in the email can only be viewed by users with access to the repository.

workflow_subscriber1
Emailing a link to a document in Laserfiche allows organizations to share information while protecting it from unauthorized access.

For example, if an HR department needs to share six different employee onboarding documents with a new staff member, it could email the recipient a link to a repository folder that contains all of the required documents. This method is faster and more secure than sending all of the attachments in a single email.

Emailing Documents Outside Your Organization

If you’re sharing sensitive information with someone outside of your organization, you can rest assured of its confidentiality by emailing the recipient a read-only document link.

With a password-protected public portal, organizations can protect their core ECM repositories by sharing a link to a non-editable version of a document. This method ensures that the recipient is able to view only the information in the repository that he is authorized to see.

For example, if a financial advisory firm needs to share nine different new account opening documents with a client, it can:

  • Publish read-only versions of the documents to a secure public portal
  • Create a password-protected login to the portal that allows the client to only view those nine documents
  • Email the client a link to the public portal, and provide the login credentials in a separate form of correspondence

Emailing Documents that Need to Be Signed

For organizations that need to securely email and collect a signature for a document, integrating ECM with digital signature software can be a reliable method.

Many digital signature tools use screening methods to verify the identity of the person signing the document. For example, Laserfiche integrates with ARX—a digital signature tool that:

  • Validates the integrity of documents by using a digital certificate to verify who is signing the document, what organization the signer is from and when the document was signed
  • Verifies that the recipient has the authority to sign the document by integrating with user directories—such as Microsoft Active Directory—to access a list of approved signers
  • Protects against unauthorized document tampering by storing the digital signature in a centralized and secure hardware device

laserfiche-2_signing
Integrating ECM with a digital signature tool helps organizations easily collect signed documents while ensuring the signing party is the person he claims to be.

By combining ECM with these digital signature authentication features, organizations can protect sensitive documents and verify that the signing party is the person he claims to be.

To learn more about how ECM can help you automate key processes, save time spent locating documents and be better prepared to meet compliance requirements, check out our ECM software buyer’s guide.

Apps Advisers Need to Use

In this 4-minute Wall Street Journal video, Joel Bruckenstein, founder of Technology Tools for Today, outlines a few mobile apps that he recommends for financial advisors, including Laserfiche.

Watch the video now!

How to Make HR Records Management Way Easier

Here on the ECM Blog, we talk a lot about the roles and responsibilities of records managers—but not all organizations actually have records managers. In the case of human resources (HR), maintaining employee records often falls on the HR department itself.

HR professionals shouldn’t spend too much time acting as records managers, yet it’s crucial to comply with government and company policies regarding employee files. How can HR professionals balance compliance with the core responsibilities of HR? The key lies in three words: Transparent Records Management.

Here’s why managing employee records is difficult and how Transparent Records Management can be used in organizations without a dedicated records manager.

The Challenge of HR Records Management

Records management is the practice of filing, retaining and destroying company records in accordance with government and industry regulations.

The challenge is that most employees aren’t thinking in terms of records management when they create and use documents. Regular employees organize documents based on their daily needs, not the rules of retention and destruction set forth by the IRS, state governments and so on.

For example, an HR professional might prefer to organize her files by employee name. She creates a new folder for each new employee and keeps it in a file cabinet. But within each employee’s file is a mixture of documents—each with different records management requirements. Imagine how time-consuming it would be to search through every employee file for W4s during tax season or manually locate records that are ready for disposition.

A first step toward better records management is implementing enterprise content management (ECM) software, which allows organizations to store records in an electronic repository. This solves the problem of manually sifting through cabinets of employee files, but it does not change the way an HR professional organizes employee files—arranging them by employee name is still the most logical approach for an HR professional. Fortunately, there’s a way to retain this file structure and still make records management easier for HR.

Transparent Records Management to the Rescue

Transparent Records Management allows the same ECM repository to be viewed in two different ways. For HR, one view can display employee records by employee name while a second view displays employee records by record type: applications, insurance documents, tax documents and so forth.

“Records management” view on the left; “regular” view on the right.

This ability to arrange the same repository of employee files in two different ways is key to efficient HR records management. Regular HR employees can access a folder structure relevant to their jobs while a designated HR administrator sees a folder structure designed for records management.

The important thing to remember here is that transparent records management provides two views of the same repository, not two separate repositories. The “regular” view actually contains shortcuts to the original documents. This means that if a document is edited in the “regular” view of the HR repository, that change is reflected in the “records management” view as well—sort of like The Matrix. This function of transparent records management prevents unnecessary duplication of documents and ensures information consistency.

If you’re interested in learning how HR processes can be automated, check out our free eBook on HR automation.

The Ultimate Guide to HR Automation by Laserfiche

Scribbled in the Margins: Capturing the Knowledge of Marginalia

Were you one of those students who, despite your teachers’ warnings, continued to write in your books? If so, you have a lot of company—some of it illustrious (no pun intended). And now, there are a number of efforts going on around the world to capture these scribbled snippets of wisdom.

The notion of “marginalia,” or making handwritten notes and drawings in the margins of book pages, dates back as far as the Middle Ages. Presumably, monks made random drawings and notes to relieve the tedium of the manuscripts they were copying. Once mechanical printing started, marginalia really took off as scholars of the day held debates with the books they were reading—not so different from comment sections on websites.

To the despair of librarians everywhere, marginalia has marched on. “Such readers feel that they aren’t really giving a book their full attention unless they’re hovering over it with a pencil, poised to underline or annotate at the slightest provocation,” writes Mark O’Connell in the New Yorker, going on to quote George Steiner’s description of an intellectual as “a human being who has a pencil in his or her hand when reading a book.” Writers such as Jack Kerouac, Vladimir Nabokov, Samuel Beckett, Graham Greene, and Mark Twain were all noted for their habit of scribbling in books written by others.

These notes can still be useful to us today, say researchers. “This diverse evidence of annotation provides a considerable range of unique and largely untapped research materials, which reveal that readers—much as users of the internet today—adapted quickly to the technology of print: interacting intimately, dynamically, socially, and even virtually with texts,” writes Johns Hopkins University.

In fact, Johns Hopkins goes on to call marginalia “among the largest, least accessible, and most underutilized of original manuscript sources from the early modern period, due to the fact that they are almost entirely uncatalogued, or undercatalogued, by major research collections throughout the world.”

That’s what marginalia digitization projects hope to change. Here are some examples:

The Archaeology of Reading in Early Modern Europe, a joint venture of Johns Hopkins, Princeton and University College London, will transcribe and catalog marginal notes in 16th- and 17th-century books held in various libraries. The project will begin with a number of heavily annotated books and expand from there, eventually producing a large, fully searchable dataset available on a publicly accessible website.

Annotated Books Online enables people to add transcriptions and translations and upload annotated books of their own, access to which is then provided free of charge to researchers. Thus far, it contains about 60 volumes, including Martin Luther’s copy of the New Testament.

The Darwin Manuscripts Project, which currently offers “digital access to all of the 34,643 folios [of Darwin’s] that deal directly with the theory of evolution.” “Transcriptions are essential, as Darwin’s handwriting is often difficult to read, and having his marginalia, notes, and letters be legible can more readily support new research,” writes Allison Meier in Hyperallergenic. These include scribblings in books he studied, abstracts, book drafts, articles and their revisions, journals he read, and his notebooks on transmutation. “There are even some charming oddities like drawings by Darwin’s children on the back of leaves of The Origin of Species,” Meier notes.

Digitizing Walt Whitman’s Annotations and Marginalia is a project that has been going on at the University of Texas at Austin since 2007. “Using Walt Whitman’s manuscript marginalia—his annotations and other scribblings on other writers’ printed works—we have built prototype tools for marking up such documents as well as for displaying interactive search results for such documents using images and text,” notes the project’s website.

Hidden in Plain View: Making Visible the Robbins Library’s Marginalia Collection is a project that began this summer to digitize the marginalia at Harvard University’s Robbins Library. “Interest in readers’ marginalia ranges across disciplinary bounds,” writes Eric Johnson-DeBaufre of Robbins Library of Philosophy. “Making visible our collection of marginalia thus stands to benefit philosophers as well as historians, literary scholars, and others.”

As people progress to reading books electronically, does this mean the death of marginalia? Just the opposite, actually. Some marginalia aficionados see it as a new revolution, equivalent to that of Gutenberg. “Imagine reading, say, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and touching a virtual button so that—ping!—Ernest Hemingway’s marginalia instantly appears, or Ralph Ellison’s, or Mary McCarthy’s. Or imagine you’re reading a particularly thorny passage of Paradise Lost and suddenly—zwang!—up pops marginalia from a few centuries of poets (Blake, Coleridge, Keats, Emerson, Eliot, Pound), with their actual handwriting superimposed on the text in front of you,” writes self-confessed marginaliaist Sam Anderson in the New York Times. “This, it seems to me, would be something like a readerly utopia.”

What’s the difference between wet, digital and electronic signatures?

What do you imagine when you hear the word “signature?” 50 years ago we might all have had the same answer, but today, “ink on paper” isn’t the only option for authorizing a document or transaction.

Here’s what you need to know about the three main signature categories (wet, digital and electronic signatures) and how they facilitate (or impede) business processes.

What is a wet signature?

A wet signature is created when a person physically marks a document. In some cultures this is done by writing a name in a stylized, cursive format (or even a simple “X”) on a piece of paper. Other cultures use name seals to the same effect. In both cases, the word “wet” implies that the signature requires time to dry, as it was made with ink or wax.

Various written signatures.

What is an electronic signature?

Various legal definitions exist for electronic signatures, but the term most generally refers to the acknowledgement or adoption of an electronic message, transaction or document. Some examples include:

  • A typed name at the end of an email
  • A typed name on an electronic form or document
  • An image of a handwritten signature on a transmitted fax
  • A personal identification number (PIN) entered into a bank ATM
  • Clicking “agree” or “disagree” on an electronic “terms and agreements” contract
  • A handwritten but digitally captured signature made on a touch device, such as a tablet or smartphone (sometimes referred to as a “dynamic signature”)
  • A digital signature gathered by an eSign application like Adobe Sign.

What is a digital signature?

Sometimes referred to as a cryptographic signature, a digital signature is considered the most “secure” type of electronic signature. It includes a certificate of authority, such as a Windows certificate, to ensure the validity of the signatory (the signature’s author and owner).

The parties on either side of a digital signature can also detect whether the signed document was altered or changed in any way that would invalidate it. In addition, electronic messages are signed with the sender’s private decryption key and verified by anyone who can access the sender’s public encryption key; this further ensures that both parties are who they say they are and that the content of the message has not been changed or intercepted.

Image showing how private keys can digitally sign messages that can then be read using public key.

Digital and electronic signatures are often used synonymously, but most types of electronic signatures do not have the security features of true digital signatures.

Some common uses for digital signatures include electronic tax forms, applications for business permits and online college applications.

Are different signatures required for different purposes?

The use of wet, electronic or digital signatures is left to the discretion of each party. Since the Electronic Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act (ESIGN) went into effect in 2000, digital and electronic signatures have held the same legal standing as wet signatures. Nevertheless, some organizations and individuals still prefer handwritten signatures.

The ESIGN act does preserve the right of a party to use or accept wet signatures even if the documentation in question is electronic. It is up to each organization to create its own policy around signatures.

How does each type of signature affect business processes?

Many document-based business processes require signatures, such as the approval of contracts, invoices and employee evaluation forms. Wet signatures tend to slow these processes down because of their dependence on the physical exchange of paper, but even electronic signatures can become impediments when someone fails to sign a document in a timely manner.

Organizations operate at peak efficiency when electronic signatures are incorporated into an automated business process. For example, as the following video shows, if a manager forgets to sign an invoice, an automated system can send her an email reminder after a period of time has passed.

 
One of the fastest ways to get started with incorporating digital signatures into your automated business processes is to use a solution marketplace. These marketplaces offer an extensive range of pre-built solutions, templates and integrations for users of a particular platform. For example, Laserfiche offers an Adobe Sign integration on its marketplace.

Learn how digital and electronic signatures can be incorporated into your contract management process. Download the free guide!

Download the guide to automating contract review and approvals.

 

How Do You Explain Records Management to Non-Records Managers?

Explaining a concept to an unfamiliar audience requires more than expert knowledge—you need to be able to adapt your message so it’s relatable and thought-provoking. Records management, with its myriad rules and regulations, can sound almost like another language to the untrained ear. But employees who don’t understand the importance of electronic records management are unlikely to follow its rules, leaving the organization at risk and the records manager constantly frustrated.

We asked a group of over 3,000 records managers on LinkedIn how they explain records management to regular employees who do not share their expertise or daily business goals. Here are eight takeaways from that discussion.

1. “Keep it simple”

Straightforward messages are easier to understand and remember, but it can be a challenge to break down the many aspects of records management. Rich Lauwers, Director of Information Governance at Merrill Corporation, shared a simple slogan that was passed on to him from a colleague:

Records management is knowing what you have, where you have it and how long you have to keep it.

By starting every client conversation with this slogan, Rich is able to ease any anxiety caused by the changing regulations, practices and legal ramifications of records management.

2. “Put your global view to good use”

Besides the CEO, the records manager is one of the few people who has a comprehensive view of the organization’s methods and operations. This knowledge is collected over the years through information audits and policy reviews, giving the records manager keen insight into the routines of regular employees.

Records managers can use this global view to address “throw it over the wall” thinking—i.e., when departments pass off responsibilities to the next department without considering the impact on organizational efficiency. A common example of this is when one department passes a paper form to the next department, which then has to enter the form data into its software system—using a consistent electronic form would save time for everyone.

Once records managers help regular employees understand they’re all part of the same team, those employees might be more receptive to sharing the duties of records management.

3. “Show how records management is a means, not an end”

Records management, like IT, exists to support the infrastructure of an organization. It is crucial that employees view records management not as a resting place for unneeded documents but as a set of principles that must be followed in every department and process.

In order to communicate this idea, records managers should first understand how their users operate by asking:

  • What services are you providing?
  • Who are your customers or clients?
  • What are your pressures or pain points?
  • What consequences do you have for errors or non-compliance?

With these questions answered, records managers can explain records management and the useful role it plays in the day-to-day lives of regular employees.

4. “Let executives spread the message”

If the message of the records manager tends to fall on deaf ears, change the speaker. One LinkedIn member used video recorded messages from his organization’s CEO and Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer to roll out a new records management program. In his case, it was crucial to go beyond C-level approval and have executives actively advocate the records management initiative.

5. “Use analogies for records management”

When employees claim that records management is too complicated to handle on their own, it helps to relate organizational records management to personal records management. For instance, home life requires you to sort mail and throw out what you don’t need, keep some mail until an action is completed (such as paying a bill) and retain other pieces of mail as required (such as tax documents).

In this way, records managers prove that regular employees already practice records management to some extent, making it less alien of a concept. The main distinction is that in an organization, everyone must follow the same rules and the consequences of non-compliance affect more people.

6. “Bring the risks of non-compliance to life”

Certain people require dramatic examples to be shaken out of apathy. I am in no way endorsing the idea of staging an emergency in the records storage facility, but it can help to go over the worst-case scenarios of non-compliance. For example, one wealth management firm experienced a six month FINRA audit that essentially put business on hold. According to one LinkedIn member, sharing these horror stories prompts action from regular employees without much effort from the records manager.

This approach should be made with caution as employees might replace arbitrary recordkeeping behavior with record hoarding, which can still put the organization at risk.

7. “Don’t associate records management with downsizing”

Electronic or automated records management can make compliance easier for records managers and regular employees, so why would anyone resist the idea? One LinkedIn member emphasized the importance of phrasing records management initiatives so that employees focus on the direct benefits, such as taking on more valuable tasks, improving service and freeing up office space. On the other hand, records managers should avoid associating an automated system with staff reduction.

8. “Let regular employees do the talking”

Ultimately, some people need to realize the importance of records management on their own and not because someone gave them a list of rules. With these employees, it helps to let them explain records management to themselves.

To use this method, records managers should ask several questions and engage in two-way conversations with regular employees. For example, a records manager at a university can ask an administrator, “What bothers you about the current student records system?” A possible answer might be, “I dislike it when I ask for a student record and it takes a week for the student services department to respond, then when I get it, the file’s incomplete.” This answer highlights the value of an electronic records management system with a searchable database, which the administrator identified in her own way.

The task of explaining records management to regular employees is not always easy, but it can be done. To make the job of the records manager even easier, organizations should implement a records management system that is systematic, organized and easy to use. Learn more here.

4 Ways to Drive Collaboration Among Departments

A company with internal strife among departments is like a person who constantly trips over his own feet. Progress is nil, and the potential for self-destruction is almost comical. Glassdoor is an employer review site that reveals the best—and worst—companies to work for. Employees at low rated companies frequently mention “poor communication” and “disorganization” in their reviews, which are key indicators that collaboration is lacking. Not coincidentally, several of these companies have also been rated poorly by their customers. Here are four ways an organization can drive interdepartmental collaboration, which can ultimately improve customer service.

1. Focus on the Main Goal

In BOOM!: 7 Choices for Blowing the Doors Off Business-As-Usual, authors Kevin and Jackie Freiberg point out that firefighters, police forces and other first responders rarely get caught up in “tribalistic” or fragmented behavior when working together because there is no confusion as to what their goal is: saving lives. Collaboration comes a lot easier when every department realizes and works toward a shared goal. It’s no longer about every department for itself—it’s about working together to accomplish the larger enterprise mission.

2. Start from the Top

A culture of collaboration ultimately begins with the leadership team. According to leadership development consultant Susan Cucuzza, collaboration can turn into competition when it isn’t managed well. “Because collaboration consists of interdisciplinary groups trying to come together, intended collaboration can turn into whose idea is better, whose solution should be followed and who is smarter,” says Cucuzza. Having departmental leaders step up to oversee collaboration is a great start. Cucuzza argues that even informal or unofficial leaders can be a huge help in determining who needs to be involved, helping everyone understand the benefits of collaborating and identifying the overall goal.

3. Whiteboard the Collaborative Processes

A large part of understanding how departments fit together to achieve the organization’s mission is knowing what and how a department contributes to a process. Several companies that have gone through company-wide system updates strongly suggest “whiteboarding” their processes, or gathering teams and departments together to understand multi-department tasks. Extensively “whiteboarding” every process was helpful for two reasons:

  1. With the entire team in the room, everyone was able to see how every role contributed to each process.
  2. Everyone involved had a chance to provide input on how to make the process better and to officially agree on how new processes would work.

Of course, it isn’t necessary to wait for a system overhaul to get to know the departments around the organization. Bringing teams together is a proactive way to give departments the opportunity to learn about each other and discover:

  • What other departments do.
  • What tasks require which departments.
  • How departments support each other.
  • What pressures, roadblocks and barriers other departments face in carrying out the enterprise mission.

4. Communicate More Effectively with Tech Tools

Conference meetings aren’t always the best way to communicate, and emails aren’t always the best method to exchange ideas. An enterprise content management (ECM) system can facilitate interdepartmental communication and collaboration by:

  • Capturing documents and automatically filing them, making it easier for everyone—regardless of department—to find the right information.
  • Providing versioning control so everyone references—and edits—the current copy of a document.
  • Automating notifications to remind team members of upcoming deadlines.

There’s no room for overly competitive departments bickering with each other in today’s competitive landscape. When departments cooperate to achieve organizational goals, tasks are completed faster and more efficiently, which can ultimately translate to a better customer experience.

Many business processes, such as employee onboarding or A/P, require interdepartmental collaboration. How can you improve these processes so that departments are in sync? Download the free guide How to Diagram Your Business Process and get started!