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Enterprise Content Management Terms

Return to Enterprise Content Management (ECM) from PaperFree

Terms often associated with ECM:

Content and Documents

Unstructured content enters an organization's IT infrastructure from a variety of sources. Regardless of how a piece of content enters, it has a lifecycle. Follow a document through its lifecycle as viewed through the use of ECM technology.

  • Electronic Unstructured Data: email, instant message, text document, spreadsheet, etc.
  • Electronic Forms
  • Paper Documents/Forms

Scanning

Paper generally enters the organization through a scanner, or sometimes, a multifunction device. In centralized scan operations, large volumes of paper are put into the system by dedicated workers. In distributed operations, smaller volumes of documents are captured with lower volume scanners or multifunction devices closer to their point of creation.

Document Imaging

Software captures the image of the paper document. Increasingly, electronic document images have the same legal status as a paper document..

Forms Processing

Business forms are ingested into the system. Most forms today are "structured"-the location of the form elements are known. The ability to process unstructured forms, those without a pre-defined form template, is improving..

Recognition

Technologies that allow paper information to be translated to electronic data without manual data input. Recognition technologies have progressive capabilities from optical character recognition (OCR) to intelligent character recognitions (ICR) and are important for converting large amounts of forms or unstructured data to usable information in a content management system. .

Categorization/Taxonomy

A taxonomy provides a formal structure for information, based on the individual needs of a business. Categorization tools automate the placement of content (document images, email, text documents, i.e., all electronic content) for future retrieval based on the taxonomy. Users can also manually categorize documents. This is a critical step to ensure that content is properly stored. .

Indexing

An essential part of the capture process, creates metadata from scanned documents (customer ID number, for example) so the document can be found. Indexing can be based on keywords or full-text. .

Document Management

Document management technology helps organizations better manage the creation, revision, approval, and consumption of electronic documents. It provides key features such as library services, document profiling, searching, check-in, check-out, version control, revision history, and document security. .

Records Management

Content of long-term business value are deemed records and managed according to a retention schedule that determines how long a record is kept based on either outside regulations or internal business practices. Any piece of content can be designated a record..

Email Management

As the de facto standard for business communication, removing emails from the server and saving them to a repository isn't enough. Email must be classified, stored, and destroyed consistent with business standards-just as any other document or record.

Web Content Management

Web content management technology addresses the content creation, review, approval, and publishing processes of Web-based content. Key features include creation and authoring tools or integrations, input and presentation template design and management, content re-use management, and dynamic publishing capabilities.

Digital Asset Management

Similar in functionality to document management, DAM is focused on the storage, tracking, and use of rich media documents (video, logos, photographs, etc.). Roots of the technology are in the media and entertainment industry, currently experiencing growth, especially in marketing departments. Digital assets typically have high intellectual property value.

Repositories

Structured and unstructured-the core of many ECM systems. This is where the data resides and where much of a company's investment in ECM resides. A repository can be a sophisticated system that costs hundreds of thousands of dollars, or as simple as a file folder system in a smaller company. The key is to have information that can be found once it is placed in the system.

Storage

Content needs to "live" somewhere. Storage technology (optical disks, magnetic, tape, microfilm, RAID, paper) provide options for storing content online for rapid access or near- or off-line for content that isn't needed often.

Content Integration

Enables disparate content sources to look and act as a single repository.

Migration

As storage media ages, content must be moved to new media for continued accessibility.

Backup/Recovery

Backing up content in various formats and/or locations helps to ensure business viability in the face of a disaster. .

Search/Retrieval

One of the greatest benefits of a strong ECM system is the ability to get out what you put in. By having strong indexing, taxonomy, and repository services, locating the information in your system should be a snap.

Syndication

Distribution of content for reuse and integration into other content.

Localization

Recasting content based on the needs and cultural mores of different global markets.

Personalization

Drawing on a taxonomy and based on established user preferences, various types and subjects of content can be delivered via user-defined preferences.

Publish

Content gets where and to whom it needs to go through a number of tools. Content can be delivered via print, email, websites, portals, text messages, RSS feeds.

Paper Electronic

Portal, Intranet, Extranet, Email, Fax.

Security

Restricts access to content, both during its creation and management as well as when delivered.

  • Digital Rights Management - prevents the illegal distribution of rights-managed content by restricting access to content down to the sentence level as well as granting/restricting permissions for forwarding and accessing content.
  • Digital Signatures - ensures the identity of a document sender, and the authenticity of the message.
  • PKI - uses a public and private key pair held by a trusted third party to transact business over the public Internet.

Collaboration

Collaboration technologies enable individual users, such as employees or business partners to easily create and maintain project teams, regardless of geographic location. These technologies facilitate collaborative, team-based content creation and decision-making.

Long-Term Archival

Content that must be preserved over decades must be saved to media, such as paper and film-based imaging, with longevity to match.


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