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Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management “ The strategies, methods and tools used to  capture ,  manage ,  store ,  preserve  and  deliver  content and documents related to key organizational processes.”   AIIM International, 2006
Why Enterprise Content Management? Corporate Pains Compliance/Regulations Litigation Knowledge Management
80% of Corporate Information is still on Paper Despite the explosive growth of computer technology in the work place: Paper is growing by 22% per year Its easier  to produce Laser Printers Print on demand Reports Faxes Why Enterprise Content Management? Corporate Pains
33% of employee time is spent with documents:  Searching Reading Modifying Writing Reviewing Why Enterprise Content Management? Corporate Pains
25% of labor costs 15% of a companies revenues are spent on Documents $15 - $20 to file a document (over its lifetime) $120 searching for mis-filed Documents Up to 1 in 20 documents are LOST! $250 to recreate a lost document 19 copies made of each document! Source: Inc. Magazine Why Enterprise Content Management? Corporate Pains
Why Enterprise Content Management? 25,000 regulations worldwide Scope: Compliance with National, State and Local regulations Depth: Industry-specific, public corporations Impact: Cost to comply or remediate, penalties for non-compliance Compliance/Regulations Electronic Ledger Storage Law (Japan) 11MEDIS-DC (Japan) Canadian Electronic Evidence Act SEC 17a-4 (USA) HIPAA (USA) FDA 21 CRF Part 11 ISO  18501/18509 Sarbanes-Oxley Act (USA) AIPA (Italy) GDPdU & GoBS (Germany) BSI PD0008 (UK) Public Records Office (UK) NF Z 42-013 (France) Financial Services Authority (UK) Basel II Capital Accord
Why Enterprise Content Management? SEC 17a-4 (International) Financial Brokers and Dealers All transaction and communication information (emails) Retention period not less than 6 years  Very short discovery periods - “Immediate” in some cases Separately stored duplicate copies  Mandates the use of a “non-rewritable, non-erasable format” SEC 17a-4 Considerations Favors, but does not require the use of optical storage The SEC will not certify specific technologies  “ If employing any other electronic storage media other than Optical Disk technology, the member, broker, dealer must notify its designated examining authority at least 90 day prior to employing such storage media.” “ Please know that the SEC does not approve or certify specific types of technologies or products as being compliant with the broker-dealer recordkeeping rule (17 CFR 240.17a-4).” Compliance/Regulations
Compliance/Regulations Sarbanes-Oxley Act (International) Financial record keeping including underlying data US and Foreign companies listed and traded in the US Criminal penalties of 10 to 20 years in jail 7 year data retention period Focus on process, access and version control “ Electronic records created, sent or received in connection with the audit or review containing conclusions, opinions, analyses or financial data related to the audit or review”. “ Preserve the record until you can decide if the document is not of future interest to an investigator.” Why Enterprise Content Management?
Why Enterprise Content Management? Litigation Affects All Organizations Focus of litigation is increasingly dependent on discovery and credibility of electronic evidence  Target Industries - Securities, Insurance, Health Care, Consumer Products, Construction Materials, Food, Transportation, Pharmaceutical Average Securities Litigation Settlements Continue to Rise Worldcom settlement $54m - 10 Directors paid $18m (05Jan05) Worldcom settlement $112.5 - 2 Investment banks (10Mar05) Enron settlement $168m - 18 Directors paid $13m (07Jan05) Directors Held to Much Higher Standards Boards Must Inquire and Deliberate to Satisfy “Good Faith” Requirement Regulatory Environment is Growing Increasing Aggressive Insurers are Limiting or Denying Coverage for Security Claims Litigation
Why Enterprise Content Management? MRI Scans Mechanical Designs Financial Trade info Timely Access to Knowledge Assets Drives more informed and efficient decision making Enables re-purposed information assets Repository information from a large retiring workforce Drives Incremental Revenue and Business Accelerates Projects Lowers Development Costs Archived scans combined with current patient information provides for quicker, more accurate diagnoses and treatment Reusing design elements in a new product design dramatically speeds time-to-market as well as lowering costs Archived financial data facilitates more insightful trend analysis Knowledge Management
Enterprise Content Management Fujitsu, Kodak, Canon, Bowe Bell + Howell, Panasonic, Visioneer, Panini Kofax Adrenaline Boards, VRS, Adaptec Microtech Plasmon, PowerFile QStar, EMC DX Fujitsu, Kodak, Canon, Bowe Bell + Howell, Panasonic, Visioneer, Panini Kofax Adrenaline Boards, VRS, Adaptec CD/DVD/BD Publishing Plasmon, PowerFile QStar, EMC DX Kofax Ascent, EMC Captiva, NSi, eCopy, Interlink ECM ISV iDatix, EMC AX Kofax Ascent, EMC Captiva, NSi, eCopy, Interlink ECM ISV iDatix, EMC AX
Enterprise Content Management - Scan Key Features of Document Imaging Scanners Simplex/Duplex Simplex – Scanning single-sided documents Duplex – Scanning dual-sided documents with one scan Pages Per Minute (PPM) Scanning speeds from 10PPM to 160PPM ADF size  Automatic Document Feeder (ADF) – The mechanical device used to hold and feed the documents. Daily Duty Cycle The amount of scans the scanner can complete in one day. Interface SCSI, USB or Firewire Flatbed Scanner feature that allows for single document scanning Portrait/Landscape Portrait – Horizontally fed image Landscape – Vertically fed image. Ledger/Legal  Ledger – 11” x 17” Legal – 81/2” x 14”
Enterprise Content Management - Scan Cranel Imaging offers the best in breed Scanners and Image Enhancement Software Our document imaging scanners are ISIS and TWAIN certified Software Enhancement options (Kofax VRS) Blank Page Removal, Dynamic Thresholding, De-skewing, Automatic Cropping
Enterprise Content Management - Capture Document capture is a process that involves several elements   Documents must undergo some measure of preparation prior to scanning.  Image creation may involve not only scanning, but also image enhancement to minimize the need for rescanning. Digitized documents require indexes for retrieval – these must be created manually or via automation.  Quality control must be performed on both scanned images and coded indexes to ensure readability and retrievability.  Once images and indexes are acceptable, the may be released from the capture process to the management application. Electronic Capture is everything else   Office Documents Email Voice Digital Assets (Photographs, Video, Mktg. Collateral) Web Content Instant Messages Text Messages
Capture Software Indexing Manually entering information from the scanned document Bar Code Machine‑generated and readable representation of data in the form of a printed series of  contrasting parallel bars of various widths, spacing and/or heights. Forms Processing Scanning pre-printed documents and utilizing zones Zonal OCR, ICR, OMR Web forms Save as Capture Save Word, PDF, etc. documents directly into the Document Management System Fax Capture Documents utilizing fax server Email Capture Attachments and email content Signature Capture Digital signatures  Enterprise Content Management - Capture
Enterprise Content Management - Manage ECM software is the hub of the solution Managing the Images  The day today interface the customer will use. Organizational Workflow Workflow allows the end-user to track documents through their organization Security  Allows end-user the ability to control who views and/or changes documents Communication with Legacy Applications “ Talks” to existing corporate databases to help manage generated information
Enterprise Content Management - Store Optical is the leader in a true archive setting CAS solutions  HSM or Archival software is needed in a Near-Line setting Disaster Recovery can also fall under this category Store is focusing on the archival of static or fixed content created from ECM solutions that meet long term compliance and regulator needs.
Enterprise Content Management - Deliver The benefits of CD/DVD Publication are as follows : Standardized media Reduction of paper Printable labels (including bar coding)  for the distribution process Mobile Most corporations still need to deliver information inside and outside of  their organization (reports, sales tools, software, etc.) and the most popular form is still paper. To better manage delivery of electronic content, organizations utilize technology, such as, CD/DVD Publication, to help  reduce shipping costs, print costs and streamline business processes.
Cranel Imaging does recommend that you become ECMP certified, which is the industry standard in Enterprise Content Management certification.
Glossary of Terms Archival Storage –  Architecture   for the secure, long-term storage of high volume document images, emails, customer records, audio or video files, financial information and engineering documentation, often optical storage. COLD/ERM -  COLD is software that takes data generated on a host computer, extracts indices, and stores data and indices on local or wide area networks. The acronym is still commonly used, however, ERM (Enterprise Report Management) is becoming more commonplace. The name was changed to reflect.that in.addition to optical (laser) disks, magnetic storage and CD‑ROMs may be used.   Document Capture –  Document capture is a process that involves several elements.  Documents must undergo some measure of preparation prior to scanning; therefore, details about the physical characteristics of the source document assume significance for the imaging project.  Image creation may involve not only scanning, but also image enhancement, as a frequent project goal is to optimize the use of machines  and minimize the need to rescan source documents to obtain acceptable images.  Digitized documents require indexes for retrieval – these must be created manually or via automation.  Quality control must be performed on both scanned images and coded indexes to ensure readability and retrievability.  Once images and indexes are acceptable, the may be released from the capture process to the management application. DASD (Direct Access Storage Device) -  A peripheral device for a computer, such as a disk that can be directly addressed. (i.e. ‑ RAID drive) Document Imaging –  Any activity that involves the capture, storage, retrieval, and/or manipulation of electronic images of office generated documents. HSM (Hierarchical Storage Management) –  Software that moves data through tiers of storage. Indexing -  A method by which a series of attributes are used to uniquely  define an imaged document so that it may later be identified and retrieved.
Glossary of Terms Cont.’ ICR (Intelligent Character Recognition) -  An advanced form of OCR that has the ability to recognize Character constrained handprint or machine print that is hard to read.   ISIS (Image and Scanner Interface Standard) -  Developed by Pixel Translations, which was later acquired by Cornerstone; ISIS provides support for 100+ scanners through a common API; includes image scaling and rotation, scale‑to‑gray conversion; supports grayscale and color, Windows printing;  development libraries for various platforms including DOS,  Win 3.X, Win32, WinNT, W2K, OS/2, and Mac; basis of  AIIM's MS61; competitor of TWAIN. MICR (Magnetic Ink Character Recognition) -  A character recognition system used on bank checks; special ink and characters are used, which can be magnetized for  automatic reading (i.e. ‑ bar codes on the bottom of a check).   OCR  (Optical Character Recognition) -  The analysis of scanned data to recognize characters so that they can be converted to editable text. Technique by which characters can be machine‑identified or machine‑read.  OMR (Optical Mark Recognition) –  A scanning device that can read marks such as pencil marks on a page; used to read forms and multiple‑choice questionnaires or the act of reading the mark.  Used in No.2 pencil tests (i.e. Scantron). Optical Disk -  Medium that will accept and retain information in the form of marks in a recording layer that can be read with an optical   beam. RAID (Redundant Arrays of Independent Disks) -  The use of two or more disk drives instead of one disk, which provides better disk performance, error recovery, and fault tolerance, and includes interleaved storage techniques and mirroring of important data.
Glossary of Terms Cont.’ SCSI (Small Computer Systems Interface) -  Pronounced "scuzzy," a high‑speed interface that can connect to computer devices such as hard drives, CD‑ROM drives, floppy drives, tape drives, scanners, and printer. It is a standard way of interfacing a computer to disk drives and other devices that require high speed data transferring. Up to seven SCSI devices can be connected to a port and can interface a computer to more than one hard disk, CD‑ROM drive, tape drive and scanners. TWAIN – (Technology Without An Interesting Name) -  An industry standard for software that controls optical input  devices such as scanners, recorders, and video capture‑interface  cards.  Application programs that support TWAIN, allow optical  input devices to be controlled from inside the application.   USB (Universal Serial Bus) -  A personal computer serial bus, which can support up to 127 peripheral devices in a daisy chain configuration and has a  speed of 12 Mbps.   WORM (Write Once Read Many) –  Describes a type of storage medium that can be written once only, but read many times; usually refers to optical disks. Workflow –  A software program that queues, tracks, and otherwise manages documents and collections of documents as they progress from entry into the system, through the various departments in the organization, to its final destination.   Zonal OCR -   A form of OCR that extracts text from specific zones for automatic indexing of forms, which minimizes repetitive key, field entry and reads an unlimited number of zones per form.
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Enterprise Content Management

  • 2. Enterprise Content Management “ The strategies, methods and tools used to capture , manage , store , preserve and deliver content and documents related to key organizational processes.” AIIM International, 2006
  • 3. Why Enterprise Content Management? Corporate Pains Compliance/Regulations Litigation Knowledge Management
  • 4. 80% of Corporate Information is still on Paper Despite the explosive growth of computer technology in the work place: Paper is growing by 22% per year Its easier to produce Laser Printers Print on demand Reports Faxes Why Enterprise Content Management? Corporate Pains
  • 5. 33% of employee time is spent with documents: Searching Reading Modifying Writing Reviewing Why Enterprise Content Management? Corporate Pains
  • 6. 25% of labor costs 15% of a companies revenues are spent on Documents $15 - $20 to file a document (over its lifetime) $120 searching for mis-filed Documents Up to 1 in 20 documents are LOST! $250 to recreate a lost document 19 copies made of each document! Source: Inc. Magazine Why Enterprise Content Management? Corporate Pains
  • 7. Why Enterprise Content Management? 25,000 regulations worldwide Scope: Compliance with National, State and Local regulations Depth: Industry-specific, public corporations Impact: Cost to comply or remediate, penalties for non-compliance Compliance/Regulations Electronic Ledger Storage Law (Japan) 11MEDIS-DC (Japan) Canadian Electronic Evidence Act SEC 17a-4 (USA) HIPAA (USA) FDA 21 CRF Part 11 ISO 18501/18509 Sarbanes-Oxley Act (USA) AIPA (Italy) GDPdU & GoBS (Germany) BSI PD0008 (UK) Public Records Office (UK) NF Z 42-013 (France) Financial Services Authority (UK) Basel II Capital Accord
  • 8. Why Enterprise Content Management? SEC 17a-4 (International) Financial Brokers and Dealers All transaction and communication information (emails) Retention period not less than 6 years Very short discovery periods - “Immediate” in some cases Separately stored duplicate copies Mandates the use of a “non-rewritable, non-erasable format” SEC 17a-4 Considerations Favors, but does not require the use of optical storage The SEC will not certify specific technologies “ If employing any other electronic storage media other than Optical Disk technology, the member, broker, dealer must notify its designated examining authority at least 90 day prior to employing such storage media.” “ Please know that the SEC does not approve or certify specific types of technologies or products as being compliant with the broker-dealer recordkeeping rule (17 CFR 240.17a-4).” Compliance/Regulations
  • 9. Compliance/Regulations Sarbanes-Oxley Act (International) Financial record keeping including underlying data US and Foreign companies listed and traded in the US Criminal penalties of 10 to 20 years in jail 7 year data retention period Focus on process, access and version control “ Electronic records created, sent or received in connection with the audit or review containing conclusions, opinions, analyses or financial data related to the audit or review”. “ Preserve the record until you can decide if the document is not of future interest to an investigator.” Why Enterprise Content Management?
  • 10. Why Enterprise Content Management? Litigation Affects All Organizations Focus of litigation is increasingly dependent on discovery and credibility of electronic evidence Target Industries - Securities, Insurance, Health Care, Consumer Products, Construction Materials, Food, Transportation, Pharmaceutical Average Securities Litigation Settlements Continue to Rise Worldcom settlement $54m - 10 Directors paid $18m (05Jan05) Worldcom settlement $112.5 - 2 Investment banks (10Mar05) Enron settlement $168m - 18 Directors paid $13m (07Jan05) Directors Held to Much Higher Standards Boards Must Inquire and Deliberate to Satisfy “Good Faith” Requirement Regulatory Environment is Growing Increasing Aggressive Insurers are Limiting or Denying Coverage for Security Claims Litigation
  • 11. Why Enterprise Content Management? MRI Scans Mechanical Designs Financial Trade info Timely Access to Knowledge Assets Drives more informed and efficient decision making Enables re-purposed information assets Repository information from a large retiring workforce Drives Incremental Revenue and Business Accelerates Projects Lowers Development Costs Archived scans combined with current patient information provides for quicker, more accurate diagnoses and treatment Reusing design elements in a new product design dramatically speeds time-to-market as well as lowering costs Archived financial data facilitates more insightful trend analysis Knowledge Management
  • 12. Enterprise Content Management Fujitsu, Kodak, Canon, Bowe Bell + Howell, Panasonic, Visioneer, Panini Kofax Adrenaline Boards, VRS, Adaptec Microtech Plasmon, PowerFile QStar, EMC DX Fujitsu, Kodak, Canon, Bowe Bell + Howell, Panasonic, Visioneer, Panini Kofax Adrenaline Boards, VRS, Adaptec CD/DVD/BD Publishing Plasmon, PowerFile QStar, EMC DX Kofax Ascent, EMC Captiva, NSi, eCopy, Interlink ECM ISV iDatix, EMC AX Kofax Ascent, EMC Captiva, NSi, eCopy, Interlink ECM ISV iDatix, EMC AX
  • 13. Enterprise Content Management - Scan Key Features of Document Imaging Scanners Simplex/Duplex Simplex – Scanning single-sided documents Duplex – Scanning dual-sided documents with one scan Pages Per Minute (PPM) Scanning speeds from 10PPM to 160PPM ADF size Automatic Document Feeder (ADF) – The mechanical device used to hold and feed the documents. Daily Duty Cycle The amount of scans the scanner can complete in one day. Interface SCSI, USB or Firewire Flatbed Scanner feature that allows for single document scanning Portrait/Landscape Portrait – Horizontally fed image Landscape – Vertically fed image. Ledger/Legal Ledger – 11” x 17” Legal – 81/2” x 14”
  • 14. Enterprise Content Management - Scan Cranel Imaging offers the best in breed Scanners and Image Enhancement Software Our document imaging scanners are ISIS and TWAIN certified Software Enhancement options (Kofax VRS) Blank Page Removal, Dynamic Thresholding, De-skewing, Automatic Cropping
  • 15. Enterprise Content Management - Capture Document capture is a process that involves several elements Documents must undergo some measure of preparation prior to scanning. Image creation may involve not only scanning, but also image enhancement to minimize the need for rescanning. Digitized documents require indexes for retrieval – these must be created manually or via automation. Quality control must be performed on both scanned images and coded indexes to ensure readability and retrievability. Once images and indexes are acceptable, the may be released from the capture process to the management application. Electronic Capture is everything else Office Documents Email Voice Digital Assets (Photographs, Video, Mktg. Collateral) Web Content Instant Messages Text Messages
  • 16. Capture Software Indexing Manually entering information from the scanned document Bar Code Machine‑generated and readable representation of data in the form of a printed series of contrasting parallel bars of various widths, spacing and/or heights. Forms Processing Scanning pre-printed documents and utilizing zones Zonal OCR, ICR, OMR Web forms Save as Capture Save Word, PDF, etc. documents directly into the Document Management System Fax Capture Documents utilizing fax server Email Capture Attachments and email content Signature Capture Digital signatures Enterprise Content Management - Capture
  • 17. Enterprise Content Management - Manage ECM software is the hub of the solution Managing the Images The day today interface the customer will use. Organizational Workflow Workflow allows the end-user to track documents through their organization Security Allows end-user the ability to control who views and/or changes documents Communication with Legacy Applications “ Talks” to existing corporate databases to help manage generated information
  • 18. Enterprise Content Management - Store Optical is the leader in a true archive setting CAS solutions HSM or Archival software is needed in a Near-Line setting Disaster Recovery can also fall under this category Store is focusing on the archival of static or fixed content created from ECM solutions that meet long term compliance and regulator needs.
  • 19. Enterprise Content Management - Deliver The benefits of CD/DVD Publication are as follows : Standardized media Reduction of paper Printable labels (including bar coding) for the distribution process Mobile Most corporations still need to deliver information inside and outside of their organization (reports, sales tools, software, etc.) and the most popular form is still paper. To better manage delivery of electronic content, organizations utilize technology, such as, CD/DVD Publication, to help reduce shipping costs, print costs and streamline business processes.
  • 20. Cranel Imaging does recommend that you become ECMP certified, which is the industry standard in Enterprise Content Management certification.
  • 21. Glossary of Terms Archival Storage – Architecture for the secure, long-term storage of high volume document images, emails, customer records, audio or video files, financial information and engineering documentation, often optical storage. COLD/ERM - COLD is software that takes data generated on a host computer, extracts indices, and stores data and indices on local or wide area networks. The acronym is still commonly used, however, ERM (Enterprise Report Management) is becoming more commonplace. The name was changed to reflect.that in.addition to optical (laser) disks, magnetic storage and CD‑ROMs may be used. Document Capture – Document capture is a process that involves several elements. Documents must undergo some measure of preparation prior to scanning; therefore, details about the physical characteristics of the source document assume significance for the imaging project. Image creation may involve not only scanning, but also image enhancement, as a frequent project goal is to optimize the use of machines and minimize the need to rescan source documents to obtain acceptable images. Digitized documents require indexes for retrieval – these must be created manually or via automation. Quality control must be performed on both scanned images and coded indexes to ensure readability and retrievability. Once images and indexes are acceptable, the may be released from the capture process to the management application. DASD (Direct Access Storage Device) - A peripheral device for a computer, such as a disk that can be directly addressed. (i.e. ‑ RAID drive) Document Imaging – Any activity that involves the capture, storage, retrieval, and/or manipulation of electronic images of office generated documents. HSM (Hierarchical Storage Management) – Software that moves data through tiers of storage. Indexing - A method by which a series of attributes are used to uniquely define an imaged document so that it may later be identified and retrieved.
  • 22. Glossary of Terms Cont.’ ICR (Intelligent Character Recognition) - An advanced form of OCR that has the ability to recognize Character constrained handprint or machine print that is hard to read. ISIS (Image and Scanner Interface Standard) - Developed by Pixel Translations, which was later acquired by Cornerstone; ISIS provides support for 100+ scanners through a common API; includes image scaling and rotation, scale‑to‑gray conversion; supports grayscale and color, Windows printing; development libraries for various platforms including DOS, Win 3.X, Win32, WinNT, W2K, OS/2, and Mac; basis of AIIM's MS61; competitor of TWAIN. MICR (Magnetic Ink Character Recognition) - A character recognition system used on bank checks; special ink and characters are used, which can be magnetized for automatic reading (i.e. ‑ bar codes on the bottom of a check). OCR (Optical Character Recognition) - The analysis of scanned data to recognize characters so that they can be converted to editable text. Technique by which characters can be machine‑identified or machine‑read. OMR (Optical Mark Recognition) – A scanning device that can read marks such as pencil marks on a page; used to read forms and multiple‑choice questionnaires or the act of reading the mark. Used in No.2 pencil tests (i.e. Scantron). Optical Disk - Medium that will accept and retain information in the form of marks in a recording layer that can be read with an optical beam. RAID (Redundant Arrays of Independent Disks) - The use of two or more disk drives instead of one disk, which provides better disk performance, error recovery, and fault tolerance, and includes interleaved storage techniques and mirroring of important data.
  • 23. Glossary of Terms Cont.’ SCSI (Small Computer Systems Interface) - Pronounced "scuzzy," a high‑speed interface that can connect to computer devices such as hard drives, CD‑ROM drives, floppy drives, tape drives, scanners, and printer. It is a standard way of interfacing a computer to disk drives and other devices that require high speed data transferring. Up to seven SCSI devices can be connected to a port and can interface a computer to more than one hard disk, CD‑ROM drive, tape drive and scanners. TWAIN – (Technology Without An Interesting Name) - An industry standard for software that controls optical input devices such as scanners, recorders, and video capture‑interface cards. Application programs that support TWAIN, allow optical input devices to be controlled from inside the application. USB (Universal Serial Bus) - A personal computer serial bus, which can support up to 127 peripheral devices in a daisy chain configuration and has a speed of 12 Mbps. WORM (Write Once Read Many) – Describes a type of storage medium that can be written once only, but read many times; usually refers to optical disks. Workflow – A software program that queues, tracks, and otherwise manages documents and collections of documents as they progress from entry into the system, through the various departments in the organization, to its final destination. Zonal OCR - A form of OCR that extracts text from specific zones for automatic indexing of forms, which minimizes repetitive key, field entry and reads an unlimited number of zones per form.