A couple of items catching up with everyone...
First, those of you who get these blog updates via email may have noticed that you got a composite of several posts from the past yesterday. I am not sure exactly why this happened -- it appears to be a problem, which is the service that distributes the emails. I have an inquiry in with them to determine why the email was triggered. I am also looking at another service that might distribute updates less frequently -- I know how conscious everyone is of the volume of email these days.
Also, in the category of the quickest response to a blog post EVER, hats off to Angela Torres of the Las Vegas Monorail Company re my post about the unusual pricing on the Monorail:
Hi John -
Thank you for choosing to ride the Las Vegas Monorail during your conference and for including us in your blog. You are correct in your blog when you stated that we offer a $9 Day Pass (promotional fare) and a $40 3-Day Pass from our ticket vending machine.
I just want to let you know that the $9 Day Pass is a limited time promotional discount from the $15 regular fare and a 3-Day Pass for $40 is a regular fare; due to space limitations on the ticket vending machines we couldn’t fit the phrase “special fare” on the $9 Day Pass selection button. The promotional offers are explained in all advertising and collateral, and on our website, www.lvmonorail.com. We offer different promotional discounts throughout the year and the $9 Day pass and $20 6-Ride ticket are our current promotions.
Again, we completely understand the confusion; hope this explanation clears it up.
Angela Torres
Director of Marketing
Las Vegas Monorail Company
I stand corrected.
I've spent the past few weeks not at Spring Training but at some partner conferences in which the word “simple” was a core part of the messages delivered. Simple and Document Management used in the same sentence? Really.
I think the focus by presenters at these two conferences on simplicity reflects something very new about the document management marketplace – and is a reflection of the movement of our industry into the mainstream. After all, the very words “Enterprise Content Management” do not normally exactly conjure up an image of simplicity.
At both conferences, there was a great emphasis on simplifying and “democratizing” the capture process. At the Visioneer conference, this meant a focus not only on their trademark “One Touch” scanning but on extending the “One Touch” concept into integration with applications.
At the DocuWare conference, great emphasis on the copier dealer/distributor channel and on the use of these devices as capture on-ramps. We are clearly moving from a world in which capture was defined by the needs and competencies of workers for whom capture was a major part of their jobs to one in which capture will be defined by the simplicity demanded by those for whom scanning is mostly an ad hoc complement to their “real” job. The DocuWare presentations also focused on out-of-the box automation of the core business processes that are the bane of mid-sized organizations: areas like accounting, HR, manufacturing, and sales. Many of these processes have in fact have gotten more paper-clogged in the past years as a result of the deployment of technology.
(More on the theme of the re-emergence of paper in some future posts...)
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