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Dealing with Information Overload Increase Productivity Save Time … Save Paper Reduce Costs Enterprise Content Management (ECM) FGFOA School of Governmental Finance November 13, 2012 City of Tampa Steven Cantler, Project Manager Joseph Hagge, Lead Analyst

Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

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Enterprise Content Management (ECM). Enterprise Content Management (ECM). Dealing with Information Overload Increase Productivity Save Time … Save Paper Reduce Costs. FGFOA School of Governmental Finance November 13, 2012. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Dealing with Information Overload

Increase Productivity Save Time … Save Paper

Reduce Costs

Enterprise ContentManagement (ECM)

FGFOA School of Governmental FinanceNovember 13, 2012

City of TampaSteven Cantler, Project Manager

Joseph Hagge, Lead Analyst

Page 2: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Where did I save that document? If I can’t find it, I’ll have to re-create it.

Has someone else already done this?

I have several different copies; which is the current and most accurate version?

Have You Experienced…

What is the current status of the review and approval for…?

Page 3: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Agenda

What is ECM Benefits Identifying Requirements Acquiring a Solution

Tampa’s Journey

Session Overview

Page 4: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

AIIM – Association for Information and Image Management…the technologies, tools and methods used to capture, store,

manage, deliver & preserve content across an entire enterprise

What is ECM

Page 5: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Unstructured

…anything NOT under an existing automated business application

Electronic: Word, Excel, PowerPoint, CAD, GIS, audio, video, image filesPaper: text, photographs, maps, drawings

ECM = Increase Productivity, Reduce Costs

Unstructured Content

Page 6: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Florida Public Records What is a recordFlorida Statutes Section 119.011(12)… “Public records” means all documents, papers, letters, maps, books, tapes, photographs, films, sound recordings, data processing software, or other material, regardless of the physical form, characteristics, or means of transmission, made or received pursuant to law or ordinance or in connection with the transaction of official business by any agency. Public Records AccessFlorida Statutes Section 119.07(1)(a)… Every person who has custody of a public record shall permit the record to be inspected and copied by any person desiring to do so, at any reasonable time, under reasonable conditions, and under supervision by the custodian of the public records.

Penalties for Non-ComplianceFlorida Statutes Section 119.10… A knowing or intentional violation is a 1st degree misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 and a jail term not to exceed one year. An unintentional violation is a non-criminal infraction, punishable by a fine up to $500. A public officer who intentionally violates the public records law is subject to suspension or removal from office. Attorney's fees and court costs are available to the requestor that prevails in a civil suit for access.

Page 7: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Capture

ECM = Save Paper, Save Time

Capture

ECM system

…putting content into the repositoryPaper scanning, imaging, OCRDirect saves from authoring tools such as Microsoft Word, ExcelBulk imports (+ drag & drop)Email, Fax, Web

Page 8: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Store

Store…where the content goes and

how to find it again Classification Search & Retrieval Check Out/In Version Control

Attributes establish order/structure metadata taxonomy

Ideally in one location

ECM = Increase Productivity, Reduce Costs

Page 9: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Manage

ECM = Save Paper, Save Time

Manage

…tools & techniques for moving content around and performance monitoring

Access and Security Audit Trails Collaboration, Workflow

Current Status who has what; waiting how long

History review of a specific occurrence; macro views of volumes, totals, trend analysis

Page 10: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Deliver

Deliver…getting the right content to

the intended audience

Display, Printing, Reporting Reuse Redaction

Redaction Issues…what is confidential or exempt…black out or white out redaction…legal basis for redaction required

ECM = Increase Productivity, Reduce Costs

Page 11: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Preserve

Preserve

…options for long term storage and proper disposal at end-of-life

Archiving Holds Retention and Disposition Transfer, Export

ECM = Save Paper, Save Time

Page 12: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Benefits TangibleIntangible

ECM Benefits Compliance EfficiencyCost Reduction

SAVINGS Money Time Space Legal

Per EMC2, each office document costs:

$20 in labor to file$120 in labor to locate$1 to store$5 to retrieve

…and on average 5% are lost, each of which take 25 hours to recreate 2009 EMC2 Corp

Page 13: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Minimizing electronic storage costs by eliminating duplicate files and old versions that are not needed.

Minimizing administration costs by centralizing management of shared assets.

Maximizing staff utilization by focusing on a single system vs. cross-training on many platforms.

Managing workflows to optimize the use of resources.

Enhancing security because all documents inhabit the same security matrix.

Reducing paper by sharing digital vs. paper files.

Convert paper records when appropriate to reduce onsite and offsite storage expenses.

Tangible Benefits

Page 14: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Improves find-ability and speed of access to information assets.

Increases knowledge sharing and reduces duplication of efforts, as awareness of information developed by others will be accessible.

Enhancing the quality of decision making by sharing information.

Enhances understanding of information status and activity with version controls and audit trails, i.e. who, what, when, etc.

Enables the application of State mandated records retention periods to previously unstructured information.

Expedites and improves discovery efforts, such as public information requests, legal actions and audits, while also enabling record protection.

Access to sensitive information can be restricted to authorized individuals and groups, and help ensure information is redacted.

Intangible Benefits

Page 15: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Providing layers of security, ensuring that any given document or particular details within a document can be viewed only by authorized individuals.

Providing redaction tools to protect material.

Automating processes for retaining public documents and purging them when they are no longer needed, according to specific retention policies.

Managing workflow for document review and approval.

Reducing the risk of penalties connected with government mandates.

Increasing government transparency and accountability.

Compliance

Page 16: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Converting paper documents into electronic ones, ending the paper shuffle.

Storing content in one central repository, giving each authorized user access to all the information needed to do his or her job.

Indexing content for easy search and retrieval.

Allowing an authorized user to quickly access collections of documents, without worrying about what documents are called or who “owns” them.

Making information available 24/7 from any computer with access to the repository.

Increasing opportunities for information sharing and collaboration.

Keeping documents from getting lost.

Providing version control for documents undergoing revision.

Efficiency

Page 17: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Reducing the need to buy or rent expensive office space, file cabinets, folders and boxes for storage.

Reducing labor costs by eliminating time employees used to manage paper records and unstructured electronic documents.

Making it easier to assemble information needed for actions and decisions.

Reducing the risk of incurring fines for non-compliance with regulations that govern security and privacy of information.

Reducing Costs

Page 18: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Where to BeginStandards (MoReq2, DoD5015.2, Dublin Core)Industry Associations: AIIM / ARMAUndertake an Information Inventory (department, section/team, role/function)Locate and assess other recent efforts

Identify the ScopeWho will Sponsor/ChampionResources ($’s, personnel)

Identifying Requirements

Page 19: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Partner with your IT dept; ask what they are doing to capture, store, manage, preserve & deliver content.

Engage your Records Management Liaison Officer.

Join AIIM; investigate training and certifications.

Perform online research; attend web casts; talk with other agencies about what they have done.

Create & distribute requests for information and/or proposals.

Get relevant demonstrations of solutions focused on your business functions.

Acquiring a Solution

Page 20: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Timetable Mid-2008 to early 2009…initial project team identified

functional requirements in RFP [37 Team Members, 20 Depts represented]

2 yrs in purchasing [9 RFP Committee Members, 7 Depts represented]

2011 Sire Technologies selected for implementation; team re-assembled [75 Team Members, 40+ Depts/Divisions represented]

Major Activities initial focus on identifying standards for pilot

implementation key areas of contract scope

paper to electronic conversion (vital records) records management (convert existing system) migration of electronic content (network shares) basic collaboration & workflow (forms, electronic

signatures)

Tampa’s Journey

Page 21: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Everything Is Miscellaneous: The Power of the New Digital Disorder by David Weinberger

Organising Knowledge: Taxonomies, Knowledge and Organisational Effectiveness by Patrick Lambe

Managing Enterprise Content: A Unified Content Strategy by Ann Rockley

Content Management Bible by Bob Boiko

The Content Management Handbook by Martin White

Reading List

Page 22: Enterprise Content Management (ECM)

Florida Department of State, Division of Library and Information Services, Records Managershttp://dlis.dos.state.fl.us/recordsmgmt/statutes.cfm

MoReq2, Model Requirements for the Management of Electronic Recordshttp://www.moreq2.euECM Connectionhttp://www.ecmconnection.com/

AIIM, Association for Information and Image Managementhttp://www.aiim.org

Dublin Core Metadata Initiativehttp://dublincore.org

Other Resources