Forgive a little self-promotion, but we're launching a brand new ECM course, and as Napolean Dynamite would say, "it's killer." And to continue the Napolean quotes (and modify them to suit my needs)...
Girls only want boyfriends who have great skills! Nunchaku skills... bowhunting skills... computer hacking skills... ECM skills!
If you've been waiting for the announcement of the new ECM course and are ready to buy (if you would like to immediately complement your bowhunting skills with up-to-date ECM skills), go to this LINK.
If you are still trying to figure out what this content management thing is all about, you might be interested in this free "How-To" white paper -- Enterprise Content Management: Impact on Collaboration and Social Business.
Content chaos is everywhere. Over the last few years the lack of confidence in the accuracy, accessibility and trustworthiness of electronic information has remained at 40%. There is a three-time improvement in confidence from those who have implemented a full ECM system, dropping from 62% with no system to 20% with a system.
Enterprise Content Management has been one of the fastest growing areas of IT. This growth is driven partly by the need to contain content chaos, maximize employee productivity, improve knowledge sharing and reduce fixed costs.
- Some organizations are struggling to achieve the vision of a single ECM system that manages all types of content across the whole enterprise.
- Two-thirds of those without systems have concerns about information accuracy and accessibility, particularly with regard to emails. ECM systems improve confidence in the integrity and retrievability of electronic information by a factor of three.
- Over 60% of organizations would look to their ECM system to provide management of physical (paper) records as well as long-term electronic records retention.
- 28% feel constrained by their ECM/workflow system when it comes to making process changes and for 15% it has limited their ability to achieve an enterprise-wide solution. 60% feel that their industry-specific requirements may restrain their ability to use SaaS or Cloud solutions.
- The larger the organization the greater the importance of compliance as a primary driver for ECM, with less emphasis on cost savings and efficiency improvements.
- 14% have no strategy for consolidating existing systems around a single, existing ECM suite, working to the Big ECM concept or maintaining and updating existing departmental or local systems or moving to SaaS or cloud solutions.
- Less than 3% are using externally supplied Clouds for content and only 6% are using internal corporate Clouds
The overriding trigger to initiate a new or replacement ECM project is that content chaos is getting out-of-hand. Where do you start? With open source, outsourcing and the cloud, how do you deliver ECM functionality?
AIIM's new Enterprise Content Management Training Program will help you to:
- Develop enterprise strategies and deploy technologies for managing content
- Establish information governance structure and responsibilities
- Implement taxonomies, metadata models and security models
- Utilize implementation planning and execution according to open methodologies
-----
If you've been waiting for the announcement of the new ECM course and are ready to go directly to buying it, if you would like to complement your bowhunting skills with up-to-date ECM skills, go to this LINK.
If you are still trying to figure out what this content management thing is all about, you might be interested in this free "How-To" white paper -- Enterprise Content Management: Impact on Collaboration and Social Business.
Recent Comments