Nexus is Coming!

October 17, 2011

The ImageSource NEXUS ECM conference is fast approaching.  NEXUS is a unique opportunity for you to discover:

  • How companies lever ECM beyond traditional Account Payable Invoice processes
  • Lean about Enterprise Content Management industry trends (Cloud, Mobile Technologies, Social Media, to name a few)
  • Invaluable opportunities to meeting and collaborate with industry peers
  • Attend certified educational seminars
  • View current ECM related technologies
  • Participate in one on one sessions with industry technical and business experts
  • Hear about using ECM as a tactical advantage is solving today’s business issues

All this as well as the ability to earn industry accreditations:

  1. Project Management Professionals (up to 20 PDU’s)
  2. Certified Records Managers (10 ICRM CMP Credits)
  3. Healthcare Professionals (16 AHIMA Credits)
  4. Accounts Payable Processionals (IAPP Credits)
  5. Business Analysts (IIBA Credits)
  6. American Payroll Association (3.5 RCHs)

NEXUS is a conference you can’t afford to miss!

Hope to see you there.

 

NEXUS 2011
November 3 – 4, 2011
Meydenbauer Convention Center, Bellevue Washington
To learn more: www.nexusecm.com

 


David MacWatters
ImageSource, Inc

 


“The Leadership Challenge” by Kouzes & Posner

December 27, 2010

Leadership is everyone’s business. Leadership is not a position or a title that one holds. Everyone is accountable for leadership in an organization. Real leaders can be found at all levels in any organization. 

I just finished reading “The Leadership Challenge” by Kouzes & Posner over my Christmas holiday. This is probably the best book I have read on the principles of leadership and what is at the core of great leaders. This book is based on over 25 years of research and study on the topic. The great thing about the book is it tells the stories of great leadership from many aspects and levels of everyday leaders. It talks about how leaders can be developed and are not just “born” that way. It helps provide a recipe of what consitutes a great leader.

The book takes you through ” The Five Practices of Exemplary Leadership” and the “Ten Commitments to Leadship”.

It is a great guide to leadership. Simply a great & must read for any leader! Which is everyone at some point in their life.

Al Senzamici, PMP
Program Manager
ImageSource, Inc.

  


Project Risk Management

December 10, 2010

One of the key factors for a successful project is to identify and mitigate risks before they happen. 

I found the following analogy regarding this subject to be both a unique and entertaining example of risk management gone wrong.

Excerpt provided from:  

http://blogs.capella.edu/projectmanagementroundtable

 

Stephen M. Schneider Says:
November 2nd, 2010 at 5:12 am

Valkyrie and Project Risk

The motion picture Valkyrie, starring Tom Cruise as Col. Claus von Stauffenberg, highlights the importance of Project Management (in general) and Project Risk Management (in particular). The movie examines the plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler in 1944 by dissonant army officers, an effort that meets all the definitions of a project. Von Stauffenberg, the man charged with actually killing Hitler, smuggled a bomb into a briefing room with Hitler present, and then left.

There were many problems associated with this failed project, including lack of proper requirements. However, risk identification was one of the more glaring deficiencies. If you were von Stauffenberg, what risks would you have considered and what risk responses would you have planned? One of the obvious risks of using explosives in an assassination attempt would have been injury and not death. If this risk happened, what would be the risk response? As a contingency plan, von Stauffenberg could have returned to the briefing room in the confusion after the blast (a natural response that would arouse no suspicion) and finished the job with his sidearm if necessary. If that failed, von Stauffenberg’s assistant could have deployed a hand grenade.

Unfortunately, von Stauffenberg assumed that no risks would be realized and that a contingency plan was not necessary. As soon as the bomb exploded, he left the area, assuming (incorrectly) that Adolf Hitler was dead. In fact, Hitler was only slightly injured. After von Stauffenberg had left the briefing room, someone accidently kicked the briefcase that contained the bomb and then moved it behind a heavy table support, which helped protect Hitler from the blast. As a result, WWII lasted for almost another year. During that period, hundreds of thousands died. In Germany, the Gestapo executed thousands of people suspected of supporting the assassination attempt. A select few were strangled slowly with piano wire – executions Hitler had filmed for his personal entertainment. It was a very high price to pay for poor risk planning. Is it any wonder that project management places so much emphasis on risk?

Robert Hughet

ImageSource, Inc.


Blogs as Serious Tools for Serious Project Managers?

October 27, 2010

Blogs are more than a medium for marketing, news, and education. From personal experience I can tell you that they also serve as serious tools for serious project managers.

As a professional project manager I’ve worked with companies from Seattle to Sydney. A key factor in making sure that a project goes well is communications. Blogs are excellent mediums for communicating information in a concise manner that gives all team members the ability to participate in the conversation.

Last year my little company of 70 people was acquired by a Fortune 50 company. As the project manager for the integration I relied heavily on our internal blog to communicate information about project status and schedule. It was also incredibly useful in helping train people on new processes associated with our acquisition.

The number one software used for communications in a project isn’t Microsoft Project or some other fancy tool—it’s email. Blogs have a number of advantages over email. Although our users got email notifications about blog updates they didn’t have to store and manage these notifications in their own email client. They could access the blog from their email notice. And if they wanted to go back to the subject they just had to search the blog. No digging through their inbox, deleted items, folders, or even worse—asking ME to send them yet another copy.

To communicate information about our integration we also put out several newsletters. But this format tended to be a big production in contrast to the blog. For each newsletter we had to pull together a number of articles and format them. By the time we got all the content together some of it was already dated. Plus, people tend to shy away from or skim longer items like newsletters. But with a blog we sent out postings as the information was needed. It was timely and digestible.

Although we kept our blog articles short they often linked to more comprehensive information. Users could look at the posting to get the gist of the update. Then they could use links in the blog to access detailed training, schedules, and other updates. The blog was their portal to key information and remained available well into the future.

Another advantage of a blog is that it’s a very interactive tool. When someone discovered something interesting about our new company they could share that information in a posting. Some users discovered “quick tips” about working with new systems that they shared with everyone else. I also encouraged our executives to share good news about the project in blog postings rather than waiting for company events.

If you’re interested in learning more about how blogs, wikis, and social media are useful tools for managers check out my posting on Enterprise 2.0 and the Hostage Dog. That article also links to a recent presentation I gave to the Seattle area chapter of the Project Management Institute.

Dennis Brooke writes about Almost True Stories of Life at www.dennisbrooke.wordpress.com. He’s a manager for a tiny but important division of a Fortune 50 company. On November 4 he’ll be speaking on Enterprise 2.0 and Project Management in Bellevue, WA at the Nexus ECM conference. See www.nexusecm for information.

This posting originally published on Blogging Bistro and is reprinted courtesy of  that site.

  


Oh No, My Dad’s a Project Manager

July 21, 2010

I’ve used skills developed as a project manager to deliver multi-million dollar projects, develop an award winning airport management team, and even organize household tasks. One of my friends, nicknamed “Bubba,” also uses what he’s learned as a project manager–to raise his children.

Every day he and his wife evaluate their nine year old daughter and twelve year old son using an Allowance Compliance Matrix. The matrix covers whether or not they’ve cleaned the kitchen,  living room, and their own bedrooms; completed their homework, and are ready on time for school. Full completion of tasks results in a full allowance. Failure to complete one or more items means their pay is docked.

Allowance Compliance Matrix

His son and daughter (we’ll call them Maddy and Tripp because those are in fact their real names) have proven to be tough negotiators. Most of their queries are related to what constitutes successful completion of a deliverable. Questions posed by them to their father/Family Project Manager include:

Do I have to clean the whole kitchen?
What if I only clean half?
What if I thought I cleaned it all but missed some spaces?
What if I am sick one day–do I still get paid?
Can I substitute a square for a task not on the square? Can I negotiate a higher rate if it’s a larger task?

When my accountant wife saw this chart she asked, “Do they get paid for weekends?” He replied that under their current labor contract they still have to do their standard chores, but they don’t get paid. It appears that they just get a break from getting paid, but not from their family duties. Labor organizers are likely lining up to represent them.

MoneyPics 016Recently he introduced a new method of performance evaluation. All allowances are now paid in “Bubba Bucks” and are redeemed at the end of the week for dollars. The exchange rate is based on a floating basket of currency parameters which include overall attitude, school Grade Point Average, etc. This new policy has triggered a whole new round of questions.

I remember as a first grader my mother set up a similar program where we were rewarded for successful completion of tasks. The fact that I took to the new program with zeal was probably a good future indicator of my career as an Air Force officer and a project manager. Unfortunately for me, my mother soon tired of the administrative requirements of the program and we went back to our semi-chaotic method of paying allowances.

You may think that using project management skills to raise children is a little regimented. I do have my concerns that when they grow up they may choose to misapply the skills they’ve developed to become lawyers or IRS Agents. In fact, when they heard that this posting was coming out, Maddy enquired about compensation for using her name. Maybe entertainment lawyer is more in line with her interests.

I’m optimistic that Tripp and Maddy are learning about the real work world, and maybe even developing experience they can use in professions that make society better. But it’s probably a good thing that I don’t have kids of my own to practice the tools of my trade.

Dennis Brooke is a PMP and former Program Director for ImageSource. He currently manages projects for a tiny little division of a Fortune 50 Company and blogs about Almost True Stories of Life at http://dennisbrooke.wordpress.com. He’ll be speaking at Nexus 2010, Nov 4-5 in Bellevue, Washington http://www.nexusecm.com/index.htm.


Part I – ECM Project Costs and Benefits

April 12, 2010

 

ECM technology has been maturing for the past few years – and with this maturation comes a wider range of price points and expertise allowing for the benefits of ECM to be utilized by smaller companies and to truly encompass ever smaller business processes and departments within an enterprise.  Regardless of the size of the ECM project, each will be scrutinized by some type of cost/benefit analysis to determine whether to proceed with the project. 

Today, we’re going to talk specifically about costs and the flip side of the coin – benefits or cost reductions.  More specifically, I hope that the following information will increase your comfort level in dealing with ‘he/she who holds the purse strings’ – from RFP stage through negotiations that ensue regarding the trade-offs between scope, resources (costs)  and timeframe on your project.

The expectation of an ECM project manager is that he/she is knowledgeable about CM technology and can communicate with all levels of IT people.  Additionally we’re also now expected to be able to understand business processes within AP, AR, HR and effectively manage projects merging technology into business solutions and/or process improvements.  What we’re not doing and in most cases not expected to do – is to be able to communicate in finance speak with ‘he/she who holds the purse strings’.  Essentially this means that we lose control of our RFP or project change requests – and rely on others because we’re not expected to be able to talk dollars and cents.

Again, I hope the following will allow you to feel more comfortable in talking dollars and cents.

So what do the words variable, fixed, average, and marginal all have in common?   Perhaps you recognize these as a few of the myriad adjectives describing different types of costs.  Let’s wade into the types of costs that CFOs look at when they’re evaluating your project and determining whether the $1 of benefits you’ve promised really equates to 4 quarters to their bottom line.

Variable cost – there is an old saying in economics that all costs are fixed in the short-term and variable in the long term.  A good example of a variable cost would be postage.  There is a perfect relationship between how many documents you mail and how much postage you have to pay. A variable cost is any cost that varies directly with an activity. 

Fixed cost – these are costs that are fixed at least in the short term.  The key question here is how long is short term?  The answer will differ from company to company, and project to project.  Most likely you’ll need to meet with someone in the finance or accounting department to determine how projects are evaluated.  Let’s assume the CFO tells you that all projects must have a payback period of less than two years.  (In Part II – we’ll talk about different ways companies evaluate projects.)  So we can use this information to determine what costs are fixed/variable in the two year period.  Union labor contracts, real-estate leases, etc., lock in costs – making them fixed perhaps for the entire project payback period.   If you can’t break a lease or sublet freed storage space in the two year payback period – then it is unlikely the CFO will allow you to include any benefits from reducing storage costs.

Looking at many of the costs in your life – you recognize that many have both a fixed and a variable component.  For example if you budget for food costs – there is some minimal level that you can’t fall below without risk to your health or well being.  This fixed component will vary depending on whether you can maintain your happiness with Budweiser or require 20 year old scotch.   When you own a car there are fixed cost components such as insurance or your car payment, and variable components such as gasoline, tire wear, depreciation or even maintenance.   Just remember that in the short-term our ECM project can only provide savings that fall in the variable cost category.  

Average cost – You’re working on an ECM project for an AP department – and a typical question you would ask during discovery would be, ‘How much does it cost your company to process an invoice?’  The well-informed AP manager will proudly come back and give you a figure somewhere between $20 and  $50.  What you’ve just been given is an average cost.  The AP manager took all costs associated with the AP department including salaries, benefits, rent, postage,  AP’s portion of  utilities, janitorial costs, perhaps IT support, license costs for their payables system etc., and divided this number by the number of invoices processed.  By now you recognize that these costs include both fixed and variable components.  If your ECM project successfully eliminated all manual invoice costs – do you think the CFO believes that the benefits you’ve penciled in are true savings?  Of course not.

Marginal cost – Let’s go back to the AP department one more time to understand marginal costs, and ask the AP manager a slightly different question, “How much would it cost for you to process 1 more invoice today?”  The AP manager will most likely give you a blank look and repeat the same answer of $20-$50.   So, you sit down with the AP clerk and time them on how long it takes to process an invoice, you then add time/costs for invoice approval, for creating a payment document, and perhaps for postage, mailing, invoice retention – and for some reason your cost comes in at a fraction of the $20-$50.  What you’ve just done is determined the marginal cost of processing one more invoice or conversely the cost savings associated with the elimination of manual processing for one invoice.  Look carefully at the costs you’ve included – you should recognize these as the sum of all the variable cost components associated with invoice processing.

So if average cost is incorrect – is marginal cost the correct figure to use when calculating ECM benefits?  From the scenario above – does this mean marginal cost is the same as variable cost? The answer to both questions is no.  The reason is that we’re making an assumption if we extrapolate the savings/costs associated with one invoice to many invoices.  If an AP clerk can process 100 invoices per day then potentially we can reduce the salary costs associated with one AP clerk if we can eliminate manual processing for 100 invoices per day.    If we’re able to replace a number of AP clerks, perhaps next year when the AP manager retires – we can replace him/her with an AP supervisor.   If the number of AP users decline significantly – then next year we can negotiate a lower license cost with our AP software vendor.

What margin really means is that all costs are variable.  At some point in the AP process we run into constraints where fixed costs are impacted.  For example, if every single AP clerk is working as hard and efficiently as possible and working all the overtime allowed by the company – then adding one more invoice would force the company to hire one more AP clerk.  In such a case the marginal cost of that one invoice could be $2000 and not $2.  What if there wasn’t any room in the AP department for one more desk/person?  In such a case the AP department might be forced to add a new shift of workers.  Adding in the cost of a shift manager and other restructuring necessary – the marginal cost of that one invoice may now be in the $100,000 range.

The point is that over the life of your ECM projects benefit period – you can expect to convert some of the fixed costs to variable costs that can then be reduced or eliminated.  If any part of this benefit period fits within the payback period of your project then you could and should include those benefits as project benefits.

My final point in understanding these costs is credibility with your customer’s ultimate decision maker. 

As an ECM project manager, you’ve easily won over the IT department with your technical expertise in ECM hardware/software.   You’ve wowed the business users with a list of successful implementations.  What you don’t want to do is diminish your credibility with the CFO when they’re evaluating your project on a cost/benefit basis.   Spend time understanding your customer’s cost structure; how they evaluate projects – and present accurate numbers that truly depict realistic benefits.   If you do – you will have won over the most important person in the decision making process.

Part II in a few weeks will look at different financial methods that companies use to evaluate projects – and how to structure your project within those methodologies.

Steve Kissinger

ImageSource, Inc

  


Don’t Think That Certifications Make a Difference for Your Career or Success?

April 9, 2010

More Organizations are requiring PMP Certification for their employees.

Read the latest news on why the PMP® is a leading certification companies are requiring their project managers to have.

Take a look at this Wall Street Journal journal article if you don’t think they make a difference.

Al Senzamici, PMP
Program Manager
ImageSource, Inc.

  


ImageSource Offers Oracle’s AutoVue Enterprise Visualization: More Than a Just a Viewer!

March 29, 2010

Given today’s economy, pressures have never been greater for global organizations to increase efficiencies, improve quality, and lower operating costs. This requires enterprises to leverage globally distributed teams to get more done, more quickly, and in an efficient manner. 

More than just a viewer, Oracle AutoVue provides realtime online collaboration and a full tracking of of each session including comments, markups and even chat sessions.

Whether a City streamlining its permitting process, enabling early and real-time collaboration with companies and architects, a manufacturing organization introducing lean initiatives or faster NPI (new product introduction) processes to reduce their time to market, or an engineering and construction firm undertakes global projects that require geographically dispersed design and construction project teams to work together, the needs are the same.  These activities must be done efficiently, in compliance with company and government regulations, and in the most cost-effective manner.  

Global companies are focusing on three main drivers:

  • Electronic document collaboration
  • Consolidation of IT tools into a common platform
  • Ensuring compliance with business processes and regulations

 Oracle’s AutoVue Enterprise Visualization is a key solution that enables companies to achieve all three goals. AutoVue allows any authorized user to view, annotate, and collaborate on virtually any document type–regardless of the desktop tool that created it.  Furthermore, by integrating AutoVue with enterprise tools like Oracle applications (ERP, UCM, CRM, ALM) or third-party systems such as Documentum, SharePoint, Enovia PLM, and many others, users can create visual applications (or “visual apps”) and collaborate within the context of critical business processes, such as design reviews, approval workflows, and field service operations, to name a few.  AutoVue is purpose-built for distributed collaboration, with markup, Web conferencing, and chat capabilities—all delivered securely using Web technologies.

Because of AutoVue’s interactive, real-time collaboration capabilities, users can e-mail participants to join a hosted review session at a specific time, and users can employ the internet or an internal network to log in to an active AutoVue real-time collaboration session. On joining a session, the file to be reviewed is loaded by all participating AutoVue clients and synchronized.

Although other collaborative applications on the market limit the input of session participants, allowing only the host to manipulate markups, AutoVue allows reviewers to view and manipulate the document independently while adding markups (which are visible on all members’ displays). Control of the session (which really means control of the common view displayed) can be exchanged among session members.

With each project reviewer assigned a different color, markups and comments are easily differentiated. AutoVue also allows session members to add feedback, and it provides an instant chat messaging system that gets stored as a session log.  The entire collaborative event, markups, notes, agreements and chat are all stored and linked with the document, providing a complete audit trail.

By targeting the key area in which teams need to collaborate AutoVue can save companies a lot of money and time and expense wasted in unnecessary travel and time out of the office.

The AutoVue suite of enterprise visualization solution fulfills diverse requirements, meeting the needs of both end users and mixed-platform extended enterprises. AutoVue was developed for professionals in the mechanical CAD, architecture/engineering/construction, (AEC) and electronic design automation (EDA) markets. However, it also supports a host of traditional digital Microsoft Office-style formats, portable document format (PDF), tagged image file format (TIFF), as well as image formats.

The AutoVue family includes the following products:

  • AutoVue 2D Professional. Delivers visualization of 2-D CAD designs such as AutoCAD and MicroStation, as well as Office, PDF and graphical formats. Comprehensive markup and annotation tools including text, color fills, hyperlinks, vector lines, and pointers are also included.
  • AutoVue 3D Professional Advanced. Supports 3-D CAD models, in addition to including the core functionality of AutoVue 2D Professional. AutoVue 3D Professional Advanced displays parts-and-assemblies models from essential solid modeling applications (such as CATIA, SolidWorks, Inventor, Pro/E, and UG) and includes comprehensive markup capabilities—delivering the ability to add text and precise 3-D markup measurements to points on a part or assembly. It also includes a compelling 3D walkthrough which allows users to perform detailed reviews of 3D facilities.
  •  AutoVue Electro-Mechanical Professional. AutoVue Electro-Mechanical Professional is the most complete AutoVue solution. It features native document viewing, markup, cross-probing, and electro-mechanical digital mockup capabilities for the widest range of document types, including printed circuit board (PCB) layouts and schematics, 3-D parts and assemblies, 2-D CAD drawings, and Office documents.. With support for MCD and EDA documents, this solution bridges the gap between MCAD and EDA teams and enables cross functional design collaboration and reviews.

More than a viewer, Oracle AutoVue’s real strenght is in its realtime collaboration cababilities with full tracking of each session including, attendees, their markups, comments and even chat sessions.

  


PUTTING TOGETHER AN ECM PROJECT TEAM

February 18, 2010

Part 2 – The Project Team

I discussed in the last blog on this general topic that the strong support of the intended Project by executive management is a critical factor for success – they need to support the projects sponsor, and smooth the path of challenges that sometimes occur when change is contemplated.  Vibrant and effective executive leadership is likely to be critical in solidifying the vision for the project.  The target of effort to achieve project acceptance and enthusiasm is cascading in that the focus of executive leadership is middle management, and then it effort fans out to focus on users and supervisors. 

What Will be the Right Team
The right team of players, working together to hone the vision, is required to construct the concepts to be considered, refine the concepts, and to develop strategies to support the selected conceptual structure to fruition.  The people on the team are as integral to your project’s success as the solution, the project plan, the software tools, and infrastructure that is chosen.

Forming the right team is not easy – as not all leaders and users welcome new ideas and changes to the routine process.  But the executive support and the right team members are just as important for for standard ECM projects success as these factors are vital for business process management (BPM) and integrated implementations.

The primary key role types that are required on any ECM project team are listed below.  The exact position titles and numbers of team members recommended for participation will differ depending on an organization’s size and individuals’ skill levels. It is important that the eight classifications of people resources below are part of the Project team.

1. Executives: provide the supporting vision and enthusiasm for the solution objective

2. Line-of-Business (LOB) Managers: provide important project support and key higher level objectives

3. Business Analyst: provide discovery and analytical resources, reporting, perspective and ideas

4. Records/Compliance Manager: assure objectives and solutions match mandates and requirements

5. IT/IS Manager: supporting infrastructure, including business & IT challenges into the plan

6. WorkGroup Manager/Supervisor staff:  provide working knowledge of operations being addressed and realistic possibilities on what will work and where the challenges will be

7. End users: discovering what will and won’t work and where the challenges for acceptance are

8. Project Manager:  This person is the organization’s operational leader of the project and the coordinator with outside resources – ECM industry experts, software vendors, conversion resources, Training, etc. 

From time to time this blog will continue with the subject of team challenges, some considerations to remember, use of supporting vendor resources, and some recommended methods for implementation.

Neil W. Lindsey, ECMM, CDIA+
Project Manager / Senior Business Analyst
ImageSource, Inc.


ECM and Internal Controls

January 18, 2010

It is time to revise your organization’s internal controls!

It has been almost 8 years since the Sarbanes-Oxley Act became law in the U.S.  Even though this act covered only public companies, a significant percentage of ECM projects were undertaken  by exempt companies to make them ‘SOX compliant’, specifically in regard to the  sections of the Act that specified the criminal penalties for manipulating, destroying or altering a company’s records.  Have you taken a look at internal controls since?

Over the past few years financial analysts have produced conflicting reports as to whether the benefits of compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley exceeded the implementation costs.  I’m not going to weigh in one way or the other, because regardless of the benefits, the costs of ECM implementation have been incurred, and these ECM systems are now part of our corporate infrastructure.  Prior to complying with the controls imposed by Sarbanes-Oxley, ECM projects were driven by the desire to reduce storage costs and improve processing efficiencies associated with documents.  More recently, ECM projects have been driven by ‘green’ initiatives to save paper; reduce postage/shipping costs, etc.

Your ECM project team has probably focused on typical high document content areas within your organization to drive the ROI on ECM implementations, such as improving the AP process by automating invoice handling.  Perhaps the next projects on your ECM team’s horizon include automating document intensive processes with workflow, implementing electronic forms for high volume repetitive paper, or integrating your ERP and ECM systems.

Typically, we review our internal controls only after an instance of employee theft, fraud, or when forced to by regulations geared to preventing repeats of scandals such as Enron or WorldCom. 

Consider the benefits of extending your ECM projects to preemptively improve controls, extend the depth and focus of internal audits, or reduce your exposure to fraud.

As an example, consider your accounts payable department through which most of your variable expense payments flow.  Your Oracle, SAP or other ERP system can most likely provide rudimentary controls to insure you don’t pay the same invoice twice, but you have to insure that your AP clerk enters the invoice number correctly.  Given the large volume of paperwork historically flowing through an AP department, it’s pretty safe to assume that your existing review of invoice number accuracy focuses only on large dollar payments.

Why can’t your ECM project team configure an automated process to route invoice images for review (prior to payment) for any invoice numbers that don’t match the vendor’s historical invoice number pattern which would be based on invoice number length, position of alpha/numeric characters, and even changes in the invoice number sequence over time?

  • How does your company ensure that only valid address changes are being made for your vendors or customers?  Can you utilize your ECM system to insure that changes are made only when proper documentation has been received and approved?
  • How do you review the work of new employees for accuracy?  Will your new-hire process and training regimen interact with your ECM system to identify errors or areas requiring re-training?
  • When it isn’t practical to segregate duties (typically for smaller companies), have you configured your ECM system to review transactions to provide similar assurances?
  • Can you easily and readily identify occurrences of management override of controls?
  • Is there any area within your organization where you can’t ask similar questions about existing controls, and where they might be improved?

So, for your next ECM project – include internal control activities by first reviewing and revising policies and procedures that would benefit from your ECM infrastructure to ensure that management directives and controls are carried out.  These control activities are found at all levels and functions throughout each company.  You will benefit your organization by improving controls utilizing ECM for activities that include approvals, reconciliations, verifications, asset security or segregation of duties.

Steve Kissinger

ImageSource

  


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