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Will the Internet Replace Your Filing
Cabinet?
By Barbara Hemphill
While predictions of the
paperless office began over 10 years ago, statistics show that 90% of the
world's information is still on paper. Can this change? Will it? After
spending more than 20 years in offices of all sizes, from one-person
home-based businesses to the offices of the largest corporations in the
world, I contend that a more important question is "Can you find the
information you need when you need it -- regardless of the form it takes?"
I have yet to find a company that was able to manage its electronic
information effectively without first learning to manage the paper? Why?
Because we haven't addressed four fundamental questions of information
management.
(1) What information do we need to keep or create?
(2) In what form?
(3) By whom?
(4) For how long?
The ability of any individual or organization to accomplish any given task
or reach any desired goal is directly related to the ability to find the
right information at the right time. Unfortunately, statistics show that the
average worker spends 150 hours per look looking for misplaced information.
What Should We Keep or Create?
Research shows that 80% of the information we keep, we never use. People's
fear of throwing things paper is enormous. Seminar attendees frequently make
statements such as "Every time I throw something away, I need it again!"
When I challenge them to elaborate, the response is often, "I can't think of
one right now!" Whether it's the fear of not being knowledgeable in one's
field of expertise, or the fear of being asked by a superior to produce
information, the results are the same: overstuffed filing cabinets and hard
drives. For 15 years I have orchestrated "File Clean-Out Days" for
companies. I used to have nightmares that after one such event, someone
would call with a horror story about something they threw away and later
needed. It's never happened!
Many companies hold their own file clean-out days, and often they fail
miserably. Why? Because management has failed to create criteria,
methodology, and tools to enable and empower its employees to make
decisions. Clutter is postponed decisions?.
So how do you decide what to keep? Begin with your company's mission and
goals. What business are you in, and what information do you need to reach
those goals? And of course, what information do regulators require?
Another important and often overlooked question is "What information can you
create that would add value to your company?" Filing cabinets and computer
drives are packed with information that, when readily available, can save
time, improve products and services, and even create new revenue streams.
For example, whenever an employee learns a new technique, such as how to
create a new report from a particular software program, a "How To…" can be
written and made accessible to the entire office on the network. Or,
consider this. What resource information do have available in your files
which could be packaged and sold to potential customers, or given as "added
value" to existing customers? To adapt that old Wild West saying, "There's
gold in them thar files…!
Paper or Electronic?
Only a small portion of the information that exists on paper today is worth
converting to a computer-readable format. However, as the quantity of
information received and generated by businesses increase, electronic
storage options become more attractive.
There are basically two approaches to saving information electronically: One
approach scans in paper documents and stores them as images. They can be
viewed using a variety of file- viewing tool, such as Adobe's popular
Acrobat Reader. The second approach scans in documents and converts their
contents into computer-readable format (i.e., text) using optical character
recognizing (OCR) software. Then there's the issue of how to store the
files. Optical recording technologies, such as CD-ROM disks, as cheaper,
while magnetic storage using hard drives allows for faster retrieval.
There are numerous other issues to decide, such as color vs.
black-and-white, how many documents you handle on a daily basis, or whether
they're handwritten or computer-printed.
The obvious advantage to electronic storage is saving space. Speed is also a
major benefit, and can be particularly attractive when electronic customer
information records are interfaced with a telephone system that identifies
callers. Even if you have to type a customer's name before retrieving the
file, the increase is customer service can be remarkable.
Other records, such as expense reports, invoicing, credit reports and other
documents relating to customer accounts are obvious candidates for
electronic storage.
The downside? If the system is too difficult to learn or too slow, employees
will quickly retreat to paper. The biggest threat may be people who believe
they are storing vast quantities of critical information on CDs and other
digital storage media, but haven't considered that the lifetime of such
media is not always guaranteed. (Remember all those 5 1/4-inchd floppy disks
for which we have no hardware!) The obsolescence issue is a big challenge.
However, the biggest hurdle for most companies is cost of equipment and
training, and time for implementation.
In my experience, the answer is a carefully managed approach using the best
attributes of electronic and paper storage. The more effectively a company
learns to manage paper, the easier and more cost-effective it will be to
move to electronic storage.
Who Should Keep It?
Unnecessary duplication is a big factor in poorly managed information. Not
only does it take up unnecessary space, it creates unnecessary risk. If you
have multiple copies of the same document, how can you be sure the document
you are retrieving days, weeks, months or even years later, is the correct
one?
A simple first step to solving the problem is implementing "The Originator's
Rule?" which simply states: "Whoever generates a document is responsible for
its retention." Instead of five people on a committee filing minutes, one
person should be responsible for the master file. Other people can choose to
keep a copy, but will not do so by default because they are afraid to throw
it away.
Every company with computers has an information systems person. While many
companies have a person in charge of records retention, they are often
brought into the picture only after the files are full, or the information
is no longer used on a regular basis. Why not have someone in charge of
making and implementing decisions about current information?
Digging through someone's paper piles or frantically searching a hard-drive
for a desperately needed document is a horrible waste of time and immense
producer of stress. It is essential to create a system so that when someone
does leaves suddenly, the company is not left in jeopardy.
How Long Do We Keep It?
One of the big advantages of electronic storage can become a disadvantage,
as Bill Gates learned when he was called to account for messages sent to his
e-mail box years previously. The issue of how long to keep personal
information, such as bank statements and expired insurance policies,
triggered the first edition of Taming the Paper Tiger in 1988. I quickly
learned that most businesses faced the same dilemma. Employees are scared to
throw anything away, because the boss might ask for it, and many bosses were
afraid, or don't take the time, to make a decision about records retention.
Even when they do, the decision often breaks down in the implementation.
Ask any 100 employees, "If you had the time, do you know there are things in
your files you could comfortably toss?" Ninety- nine would answer, "Yes,"
but who goes to work and says "Well, I don't have anything better to do
today. I think I'll clean out the files!" And if they do, quite likely
someone will say, "We've got to finish that proposal! What are you doing?"
Through the years I've seen company after company faced with a problem of
hundreds and even thousands of boxes of "archives" in storage rooms or
off-site locations. When management finally realizes the cost and the risk,
they decide they have to do something. By then, the people who created the
paper are long gone, and current employees have little energy for making
decisions about something that doesn't affect their ability to leave work at
5:30.
While there is no "quick fix" for years of postponed decisions, avoiding the
problem in the future is easy. Today's mail is tomorrow's, so to get
results, ignore the mistakes of the past and start over. Our company offers
a money-back program we call "The 24-Hour Miracle." We teach people to start
making decisions about information with the papers on the desk -- after all,
that's where the most important stuff is. There are only three choices for
any piece of paper. We call it The FAT System: File, Act, or Toss. When we
finish the desk, we move to the papers on the floor. That's where you put
all those good intentions, isn't it?
Paper is here to stay -- at least for the foreseeable future. Research shows
that introducing e-mail into a company increases paper printing by 40%.
Let's face it. The portability of paper often makes it more desirable. A
printout of a complex e-mail message, which requires thinking and
conversations in meetings, and results in handwritten notes, is frequently
far more valuable than the original electronic document. On the other hand,
the ability to send information electronically, and let the user determine
when and if to print it out, offers the best of both worlds.
One financial management company spent an immense amount of effort
developing and producing an incredibly valuable policies and procedures
manual, which ended up in dusty binders on employee shelves. Today it
resides on their wide area network, easily accessible at a moment's notice
and always up to date.
Before this article reaches your desk, new technologies will be available to
store
and easily retrieve electronic information. But don't get the cart
before the horse. Making the decision of whether to go electronic or remain
paper should come after a careful analysis of what information is important
to you and your company.
About the author:
© Barbara Hemphill is the author of Kiplinger's Taming the Paper Tiger at
Work and Taming the Paper Tiger at Home and co-author of Love It or Lose It:
Living Clutter-Free Forever. The mission of Hemphill Productivity Institute
is to help individuals and organizations create and sustain a productive
environment so they can accomplish their work and enjoy their lives. We do
this by organizing space, information, and time. We can be reached at
800-427-0237 or at
www.ProductiveEnvironment.com
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