Poll Results: What type of scanners are companies using to scan to SharePoint?

Conducted a poll over about 3 months, and wanted to see what type of devices people were using to scan to Microsoft SharePoint.  The results are in tune with what I see in the field, as folks are using a distributed scanning model with SP to put scanning into the hands of the knowledge workers.  Below are the results:

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Posted in capture, scanning, sharepoint, sharepoint 2010

Ooops. Did we backup the file cabinets?

If you look at the headlines over the past few years, you cannot help but notice the number of natural disasters that have occurred. In my conferences with IT and Departmental Management, I always pose the question when discussing business continuity or disaster planning: Do you have a plan for your paper?

Just about every company has implemented some type of plan for backing up their important digital files. Some go to the extreme with data snapshots that can be recovered from multiple locations. But companies typically don’t take the same strategy with their paper assets. The good ole file cabinet, the protector of all things paper will provide protection, right?

Companies need to take a good hard look at their paper, and assess the business impact should disaster destroy their file room. Backing up your paper nowadays is not hard, nor expensive when compared to the legal implications and time it would take to reproduce (if possible) contracts, customer files, sales records and the like.

Any paper backup plan involves a concept i call Bridging the Gap (BTG). BTG involve hardware and capture software to digitize and build the bridge to the digital world, and then a repository on the “other side” to house the records and make search and retrieval simple. The repository can be as simple as a set of named network folders, or as complex as a true ECM system like MS SharePoint. Take the initiative and backup your paper today.

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Posted in capture, Disaster Recovery, distributed scanning, ecm, imaing

Did you remember to backup your paper??

 

Backup Your Paper

In 2011, it was estimated that natural disasters caused $378 Billion in damages. Earthquakes. Floods. Fire. Hurricanes. Tornadoes. Tsunamis. Ask any CEO or Company President if they backup their digital files, and the answer is always an assured “Yes.”  But pose the same question about paper records, and you will get a strange look.

Great webinar topic on best practices and success factors for backing up your paper to SharePoint and other ECM systems:

https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/998596056

Posted in Uncategorized

The Two Most Popular Features for Scanning to SharePoint

So, when I look at all the customers I have worked with, and examine the feature sets that are most applied in a SharePoint environment, there are two that stand out: Routing Sheets and Advanced Data Extraction.  I would say 90% of all my customers use these features in some way to make the process automated and efficient.  So, what are they?  How do they work?  Outlines below:

Routing Sheets

I have mentioned these quite a bit on the BLOG, and they lend themselves nicely to distributed scanning from MFPs/Copiers, Faxs, network scanners, etc.  A routing sheet is a combo of barcodes and/or checkboxes that can allow the end users to index prior to the scan.  The information can then be translated into metadata.  This feature requires Optical Mark Recognition, or OMR.  So make sure your scanning product supports OMR.  Below are some samples:

Legal Routing Sheet

HR Routing Sheet

Advanced Data Extraction (ADE)

Many of the solutions out there today support what is called Zoning, or the ability to pick information from a specific area on a page and enter it as metadata.  ADE takes that to a whole new level and provides the ability to match patterns and extract information.  So if a customer needs an order number that is 6 digits, and always starts with a 7, the extraction engine can search the whole page and extract.  This is a huge time saver, and allows the utmost in automation and verification of data.

 

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Posted in capture, routing, scanning, sharepoint 2010

Webinar: Paperless and SharePoint

Bridging the Gap Series:  Microsoft, Nintex, PSIGEN, Canon and Eastridge technology Partners

Scan and Capture to SharePoint

Bridging the Gap:Paperless with SharePoint

https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/709652592

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Posted in BPM, capture, nintex, office 365, office 365 scanning, scanning, sharepoint 2010, sharepoint online, workflow

What is “Bridging the Gap”?

 The movement towards an office with less paper and more efficiency can be quite difficult, and with the wrong tools can end in failure.  The key challenge is a process I call “Bridging the Gap”, which uses several applications to create a bridge between the physical and digital world, and helps create a seamless process.  So what is required?  How do you create the bridge?

 

On one side of the gap, you have your physical environment: file cabinets, inboxes, stacks of folders on desks, etc.  There are two components that facilitate the crossing:

  • Scanning Hardware – scanners allow the conversion of paper documents into digital documents or images.  Organizations can use scanning copiers, fax machines or dedicated scanners to digitize.
  • Capture Software – capture software works with the scanning hardware to create an efficient and automated bridging process.  It controls the flow of digitized documents, standardizing how they are routed, and using OCR, Barcodes, Advanced Data Extraction (ADE) and other features to automate the collection of information.  It spans the gap and creates a connection to the other side or the repository.

Once the gap has been spanned, the documents need to land somewhere, just as physical documents land in a file cabinet, inbox on someones desk or another location in the organization.  Below are the two components that exist on the far side of the gap:


  • Workflow Software – think of this as the digital inbox and outbox…on steroids.  Workflow Software is utilized to create a digital mirror of your physical processes.  It can move around files, create approval steps, automatically email and perform logic that usually requires intervention by a human.  Some oraganizations dont have this entity on the other side of the gap.
  • Repository –  Think of the repository as a temporary and permanent file cabinet that can hold files during a workflow process, or as an archive copy once the whole process is complete.  You can search, sort and organize, print, distribute and copy.  Most repositories can allow full text search, if the capture software has created a searchable file format, and also allow column based searching for specific criteria.

I have seen many organizations try and bridge the gap, and not have one of the pieces above, or a piece that cannot suit all their needs.  A missing component can impact the overall value of the system.  For example, take a scanning copier that an AP department uses to scan invoices.  They email themselves the scans, open them, rename them and then save them into their repository.  Without capture software to automate the naming and routing, this is a highly inefficient process.  Without capture, files are not made searchable through OCR, and this can also reduce effiency during search.  Another example might be the lack of a repository that can provide all the bits and pieces an organization may require.  Take the organization that just saves PDFs to a network directory.  This may be fine for many organizations that merely need a simple archive to house their files.  But what about an audit event, or legal issue that may require extensive searching and sorting?


“Briding the Gap” and creating an office with less paper can provide an organization countless benefits with proper planning and design, and the inclusion of all the above components.

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Posted in capture, document management, imaging, nintex, routing, sharepoint, sharepoint 2010, sharepoint online, workflow

Imaging File Size Comparison for Planning – Color and DPI

When planning for scanning to SharePoint, here is a quick matrix for the impact DPI and color can have on file size, and the size of your content DBs.

Scanning Mode/DPI File Size
Black and White – 200 DPI 26K
Black and White – 300 DPI 38K
Black and White – 400 DPI 51K
Black and White – 600 DPI 80K
Greyscale – 300 DPI 301K
Color- 300 DPI 577K
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Posted in imaging, scanning, sharepoint 2010, sizing, storage

SharePoint Storage Baselines for Document Imaging

How much storage do I need for scanning?

SharePoint Scanning Storage

How much storage?

Looking for some baselines for storage planning for document scanning?  Here is a quick document imaging file size matrix:

Description Number of Pages

Storage

1 Scanned Page – 8.5 x 11 1 30-50KB
1 Scanned Page – 11×17 1 100KB
1 File Cabinet – 4 drawers 10,0000 500MB
1 Box 2500 125MB
1 Linear Inch 100 5MB
1 E Size Engineering Drawing (48×36) 16 – 8.5×11 800KB
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Posted in document management, sharepoint 2010, storage

What device are you using to scan to SharePoint?

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Posted in scanning, sharepoint 2010

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