How to Implement Effective Electronic Archiving (
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Companies face a range of issues regarding information production and retention due to the growing volume of electronic information, greater regulatory constraints and storage issues. Companies are confronted with technical, financial and educational challenges when trying to implement an electronic archiving solution. Here, Knowledge Center contributors Jean-Luc Chatelain and Daniel B. Garrie explain the challenges involved, and how companies can overcome these challenges to ensure an effective implementation of an enterprise electronic archiving infrastructure.
A perfect storm is brewing in the ocean of
corporate enterprise. Increasing volumes of information and greater regulatory
constraints have stirred the waters. Ineffective management of electronic
information has fed the surge, and ease of storage has unleashed a torrent of
problems. IT departments have attempted to implement electronic archiving as a
solution. However, when deploying such solutions, enterprises have confronted
almost overwhelming challenges—technically, financially and educationally.
Before embarking on an electronic archiving project
and addressing which solutions to deploy, an enterprise must ensure that all
employees understand the fundamental differences between paper documents and
electronic documents ("e-documents"). E-documents differ from paper
documents in scale, mutability and readability. Let's explore these in detail:
Scale
An employee in a traditional business may send and
receive one to ten letters or memoranda a day. The same worker in an IT-enabled
business may send or receive fifty or more electronic letters or e-mails in a
day. It is quite common for a global enterprise to produce upwards of one
million e-mails a day. This creates challenges for storage and retrieval of
information, making scale the leading factor in electronic archiving cost and
complexity.
Mutability
Albeit subject to forgery, intentional physical
obfuscation or destruction, written or printed information is for all intents
and purposes more or less immutable. The same is not true of information
content stored within an e-document. E-documents can be easily modified without
leaving an immediately visible trace, which may change the document’s meaning
completely. In addition, e-documents can be destroyed without leaving any
visible record of the document's existence behind. Mutability is the second
most significant challenge in implementing electronic archiving solutions
because demonstrating the authenticity of a document, and ensuring that it has
not been altered after retrieval, are of prime importance in any litigation or
regulatory setting.
Readability
Due to changing technology and evolving computer
systems and applications, e-documents may vary in format and physical media
across heterogeneous computing platforms, as well as within variations on a given
platform.
For example, few can retrieve information stored only
a few years ago on floppy disks. An enterprise is hardpressed to guarantee that
certain forms of e-documents will be able to be decoded, and that their content
and format will remain understandable or readable in the future. This disparate
and intangible nature of e-documents, combined with the unproven durability of
associated support mediums, forms a third significant challenge surrounding
electronic archiving.