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July 29, 2007

ECM and Sharepoint

The article below from EDOC Magazine on ECM and Sharepoint by AIIM Board Mike Alsup member is worth checking out. Readers should also make sure to check the schedule for our Fall seminar series, which will focus on the intersection between ECM and Sharepoint.

Link: AIIM E-DOC Magazine - Enterprise Content Management at Work!. The below quote provides a flavor of the article....

Microsoft is consolidating a number of traditional frontoffice and back-office productivity products into the "Office 2007" product suite. One of the key components in Office 2007 is Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007 (MOSS), which might be the key to getting Microsoft out of the desktop misery that they have been in for many years. We initially reviewed the introduction of this family of products in the September 2006 issue of EDOC. The second part of this article examines the architectural alternatives and decisions that large organizations face in the deployment of MOSS.

Resource Check -- AIIM Blogs

The blog is not the only AIIM blog. Here is a sample of some of the blogs written by AIIM executives and volunteers, and the focus of each...

AIIM Industry Watch BLOG (THIS ONE)
John Mancini, President of AIIM, expounds on recent industry research and trends in the ECM Industry.

Content Overload BLOG
AIIM E-DOC Magazine editors, Bryant Duhon and Janelle Julien, provide thoughts, perspectives, and random observations on the ECM industry.

AIIM Knowledge Center BLOG
Atle Skjekkeland, Vice President, Professional Development, writes about online resources and research on the Enterprise Content Management industry.

Taking AIIM BLOG
Carl Frappaolo, Vice President, Market Intelligence, provides his musing on Innovation, Knowledge, Process and Content Management.

BizTechTalk BLOG
Dan Keldsen, Director, Market Intelligence, talks about technology from the edge to the core.

AIIM Standards Watch BLOG
Betsy Fanning, Director of Standards, briefs you on Enterprise Content Management standards.

AIIM ECM Channel BLOG
Document Management Solution Providers (resellers, integrators, distributors and service providers) focus on issues relevant to day-to-day activities.

July 24, 2007

Would Like Your Input!

We're in the process of pulling together background information for a strategic planning session with the AIIM Board.

I'd like to ask blog readers to spare just a few minutes and provide input on the key issues facing your organization. It will only take a few minutes and be very helpful to us.

If you are from AN END USER ORGANIZATION, go to THIS LINK.
If you are from a SUPPLIER or VAR or INTEGRATOR or SERVICE BUREAU, go to THIS LINK.

Anyone else, don't worry about it!

Thanks for your help.

Just When You Thought You Were Safe -- Book Reviews!

We've added short book reviews to my blog site. For details, go to the blog at www.aiim.typepad.com and look at the right navigation.

Looking for Information from Users and Suppliers

It would be helpful if blog readers could take a few minutes and provide input into the issues facing your organization. This will be considered during our annual planning process.

I just need your input on 2 questions.

If you are an END USER organization, go to THIS LINK.
If you are from an ECM supplier or service provider or VAR, go to THIS LINK.

Thanks for your assistance; it will only take 5 minutes

Access vs. Control

Indwatch_2In looking at the results of this year’s AIIM State of the Industry report (www.aiim.org/industrywatch), I was struck by how dramatically the core business drivers for content and document technologies have changed over the past four years – in the direction of risk-centered drivers.

Now a couple of caveats are in order when thinking about this data: 1) the sample was not the same each year; 2) the sample, while global, has become a bit more tilted toward English speaking countries in the past few years; and 3) clearly end users in real life don’t typically implement ECM solely for one of these reasons.

But even with this caveat, it is striking how the drivers for ECM technologies have shifted in the direction of risk reduction over the past few years. These risk-driver end users cite reasons such as “business continuity” and “compliance” and “legal concerns” for their interest in content and records management. This migration is understandable given some of the events over the past five years—one could almost plot such events as Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA, Katrina, and the new Federal Rules of Civil Procedure on the chart.

Perhaps a better way of understanding the above chart is to think of an information management pendulum that is constantly swinging between “access” and “control.” Customers expect companies and government at all levels to deliver services that have the ease of use of an Amazon, coupled with the security of a Fort Knox. Given the explosion of new information management mandates and requirements over the past few years, it’s no wonder that the pendulum now clearly seems to be swinging in the direction of “control.”

Some interactions with my now college graduated first-born (Note to readers: There is no sweeter raise you can get than the end to a college tuition!) remind me, though, that the tension between access and control is indeed a pendulum and is constantly in motion. And they also remind me that once this next generation enters the workforce, we are going to indeed see all sorts of tensions and demands back in the direction of access.

Example #1: Like many people my age, I live on email. I ran into a cartoon recently that depicted a support group with a guy in the middle proclaiming, “Hi, I’m Barry and I check my email 200-300 times per day.” That’s me, the Crackberry addict.

Now when I think about my kids and how they use email (and this gets more pronounced the younger the kid), I realize that when I send them an email, I immediately also send them a text message to tell them that I have sent them an email. Otherwise, a week or more might pass before they see it.

• Lesson #1: With good cause, organizations are spending a lot of time and money right now trying to get email under control. However, this is just the beginning. The balkanization of information—PCs, phones, voice mail, texting, and instant messaging are just the beginning—is real and inexorable.

Example #2: Given that we live in Northern Virginia, we know a great many kids who go to Virginia Tech. In the first hours of the Virginia Tech tragedy, we were very concerned about whether the kids we know were OK. The news media didn’t seem to know much of anything.

About 2:00 in the afternoon, my son called and said that all the kids from our high school were safe. I asked him how he knew this given that lots of the cell connections were very strained with Blacksburg and that the media seemed to know nothing. He told me that all the kids had used Facebook to create an impromptu and unofficial network of networks to instantly share what they knew—obviously without any real plan beforehand and without any real involvement of “official” information sources.

• Lesson #2: The next generation of entrants to the workforce will demand massive and unscripted collaborative information networks, creating a massive push back in the “access” direction of the pendulum.

Example #3: Shortly after our first-born graduated, he and three friends took off for Southeast Asia. (One observation on how things have changed…those of my generation did everything they could think of to avoid going to Southeast Asia after college graduation.) Just before going (advanced planning perhaps being a subject they could have spent a bit more time on in college), they decided to set up a blog. Within just an hour, they had the blog set up. They were posting to it—pictures and text—directly from their cell phones. And they didn’t spend a dime. (For the curious, check out www.travelsinsoutheastasia.blogspot.com.)

• Lesson #3: Massively complex, non-intuitive solutions will not cut it in the decade ahead. Nor will massively expensive solutions. Anecdotal evidence from end users suggests that the actual cost-per-seat of ECM solutions has shifted by an order of magnitude in the past 24 months. Some of this is a function of a massive expansion in the scope of implementations. Some of this is the price pressure being created by the core content service players and the open source players. But something very fundamental is happening and it will also push the pendulum back in the direction of “access.”

So the net-net: With good cause, the momentum in the industry right now is in the direction of “control.” But let’s not forget the “access” side of the pendulum. There are forces out there right now collecting to change things once again.

July 23, 2007

Linking ECM and BPM

Fairchild_resized_2I recently spoke with Mark Fairchild, the Chief Technology Officer at BancTec, about the connections between ECM and BPM technologies and BancTec's perspectives on the process challenges facing end users. We turned the conversation into a podcast -- see THIS LINK for details, or type http://www.aiim.org/podcasts/aiimpodcast.asp?ID=33408 into your browser.

July 18, 2007

This Association Stuff Isn't Just About an Industry

Murphy_and_manciniForgive a quick personal note, but sometimes you have moments when you realize this association stuff is not just about an industry.

On Monday, I participated in the annual New England chapter golf tournament on behalf of the Horace Mann School for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing. The Horace Mann School for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing is the oldest public school for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing in the United States. The Horace Mann School has a rich history providing quality education for Deaf and Hard of Hearing students. Founded in 1869 and strengthened by association with historical figures such as Alexander Graham Bell and Helen Keller, the Horace Mann School has been educating children and young adults for over 135 years. Our New England chapter has a long relationship with this wonderful institution, and this was the 12th annual golf tournament.

I am invited up each year based on my position at AIIM and on the hilarity of my golf game. Probably mostly the latter. I have been paired with many unfortunate New Englanders over the past decade, including K.C. Jones from the Boston Celtics, who pronounced after completion of our round that he had "never seen anyone with my golf ability."

This year, I had th privilege of golfing with Bill Murphy, who had just celebrated his 82nd birthday. Bill is the warehouse manager for Databank IMX in Canton. He gets to work at 4:00 a.m. each day. I stopped by Databank on Tuesday to get a tour, and when we got to the loading dock, there was Bill, moving large file boxes filled with documents off a palette that had just arrived. One of the most amazing people I've met during my time at AIIM.

And on top of that, he actually knew how to play golf.

Did You Know AIIM Does Podcasts?

There are now 7 episodes in our AIIM "ECM Hotseat" podcast series. We've started off with some executive interviews, but over the next few weeks you will start to see interviews with some of our Best Practices winners and other end user interviews. Subscribe now so you do not miss out.

If you are an iTunes user, click HERE to subscribe to the series and have it automatically downloaded to your iPod. If you use another MP3 player, click HERE to subscribe.

If you would like to go directly to an interview, the last three are:

Episode 7:
Oracle's Andy MacMillan on the ECM Hot Seat
Andy MacMillan, VP of Product Management for Oracle, talks about industry consolidation, the Stellent acquisition - and the impact of both on end users.

Episode 6:
Spring CM's Christine Mason on the ECM Hot Seat
Christine Mason talks about the growing of availability of ECM as a service (SaaS) and the impact this is having on how end users view ECM technologies.

Episode 5:
Kodak's Kevin Keener on the ECM Hot Seat
Kevin Keener from Kodak talks about the capture industry and where it’s headed.

In case you missed these postings over the past few weeks...

We posted a variety of presentations over the past few weeks. If you were on vacation, here's a bit of a catch-up...

PPT of our new BPM survey results (812 end users) -- For the full survey, go HERE.

An overview of ECM in State and Local Government.

A few tongue in cheek presentations from our ECM guru series...

Welcome to Marketing, 2 Drink Minimum
ECM Consolidation
Perils of E-Mail Management

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