Issue dated - 1st December 2003

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Front Page > Opinion > Story Print this Page|  Email this page

Enterprise content management

It is critical for companies organise their content in a manner that makes it easier for employees to create, access and store information. Deepak Shikarpur explains content flow in the enterprise and the urgent need for organisations to structure their content

Enterprises that fail to unlock the value of their content assets, from documents to Web pages to digital assets, are losing billions of dollars in lost opportunity.

— Alan Pelz-Sharpe, VP Research & Consulting North America, Ovum,

Content is the backbone of all businesses, whether in the form of product specifications, legal documents, purchase orders or manufacturing procedures. The volume of content that companies create is staggering. Analysts estimate that the volume of content each company will manage will continue to grow at the rate of 200 percent per year.

What is content?

Content is in essence, any type or ‘unit’ of information. It can be text, images, graphics, video, sound, documents, etc. Content may be more than just a piece of paper or simple file or, any data type conveying information most effectively to the reader (text, graphics, video, audio) or an executable program. In short:

Content = Unstructured + Structured data

Need to manage content in an enterprise

It is estimated that 85 percent of the data generated by an organisation is unstructured. It is the problem of managing unstructured data that has led business enterprises to look towards effective tools for content management.

What is enterprise content management?

  • Enterprise content management is the technologies, tools and methods used to capture, manage, store, preserve and deliver content across an enterprise.
  • Capture–Data capture, imaging, scanning and hybrid systems, colour scanning, forms processing, handwriting recognition, ICR/OCR/voice recognition.
  • Manage–Business process management and outsourcing, workflow, portals, search engines, XML, content categorisation and classification.
  • Store–Email security and archiving, data warehousing, storage systems (SAN, WORM, RAID, MO, DVD, CD-RoM), compression.
  • Preserve–Records management and archiving, film-based imaging, digital preservation, disaster recovery and planning.
  • Deliver–Digital printing and publishing, print systems and utilities, encryption, authenticity, digital signatures, electronic bill presentment, wireless/WAP /Bluetooth.

ECM enables organisations to effectively manage content across the enterprise. Content management focuses largely on Web content management while its forerunner, document management, was the first large-scale attempt to automate the handling of unstructured information. ECM is the combination of the two.

The core of any effective business or enterprise application is the strategic management of content. Handled strategically, content can bind together the customer-facing layer of a process (customer relationship management, e-commerce, etc.) with the back-office (ERP, legacy databases, order processing, etc.) fulfilment layer into an effective application

To sum up, whatever industry you are in and whatever type of work you do; you are likely to have more content than you know what to do with. All of that information is useless without proper management. ECM is the key to making all of your content throughout your organisation useful to you.

Need for enterprise content management

While enterprise content management is a serious issue for most enterprises—large or small, private or public, around the world—it is a pressing concern for data-intensive industries such as financial, education, healthcare, telecom, retail, manufacturing and entertainment as well as certain government and military agencies.

The initial challenges organisations faced in managing content were based solely around managing hard documents. Then came the Internet, driving the digital economy and changing the way we do business. Today, organisations are faced with managing large numbers of documents through millions of pieces of graphics and text for Web pages.

Organisations look to emerging technologies to ensure up to date and accurate information gets to the right people at the right time.

Analysts estimate that the volume of content each company will manage will continue to grow at the rate of 200 percent per year.

The content silo trap

There are multiple content creators (departments / sections / branches) that create numerous information products (product specifications, brochures, reference documents) for multiple channel delivery (paper, Web) for multiple content users (customers, suppliers, partners, employees)

Too often content is created by authors working in isolation. Walls are erected among content areas. With the result that content is created and recreated and recreated. This leads to:

  • Lack of standardisation and consistency.
  • Higher cost of content creation, management, and delivery.
  • Poor communication.
  • Lack of sharing.

Content management - in a state of crisis

Unprecedented volumes and varieties of enterprise data are driving up demand and raising the stakes. As a result, despite the astounding increases in information processing speed since the advent of ‘the information age’, a typical office worker still spends up to 40 percent of his or her time looking for information—the same as in 1940.

In order to remain competitive, organisations must have fast and far-reaching access to content and the ability to deliver it immediately to users. Enterprise content management is intended to support the entire business information supply chain by providing the right information to the right person at the right time.

Deepak Shikarpur is executive director of the Computer Society of India. Contact him at deepakshikarpur@yahoo.com

Enterprise content management system

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