Title: EMail Management The Great Unknown
1E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Presented to
- ARMA Internationals
- Wyoming Chapter
- February 14, 2003
2E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- E-mail has become the most commonly used method
for correspondence, both internal and external,
in business today.
3E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- According to IDC, the world's leading provider of
technology intelligence, industry analysis,
market data, and strategic and tactical guidance
to builders, providers, and users of information
technology, figures for 2002 show that - 60 of business-critical data is now stored in
e-mail, including contracts, intellectual
property and company know-how - This is up from 30 in 1998
4E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- The average employee-user
- spends more than 4 hours of the business day
using electronic mail - sends and receives an average of 60 to 250
e-mails per day - has attachments for approximately 25 of their
in-coming/outgoing e-mail
5E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- E-Policy Statistics
- 62 of employers monitor employee e-mail and
Internet use - 68 cite legal liability as the primary reason to
monitor - 87 of companies that monitor have a written
e-mail policy and 83 an Internet policy - 10 of companies have been ordered by courts to
turn over employee e-mail related to lawsuits - Source American Management Association The
2001 Electronic Policies and Practices Survey
6E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- On the Plus Side
- E-mail provides a means to create, transmit and
respond to messages electronically - E-mail can expedite communications, eliminate
paperwork, and automate routine tasks - Effective E-mail systems can increase efficiency
and provide cost savings
7E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- On the minus side
- Personal use of E-mail can clog up the system
- Questions on whether E-mail is a public record
- Policy enforcement is difficult
- E-mail is vulnerable and exposed
8E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Technology
- has changed the way we do business
- has greatly expanded the methods of creating
editing, maintaining, transmitting and retrieving
information - has provided us with new tools to efficiently
manage all aspects, physical form, storage media
and characteristics of our information assets - does not negate the need for good records
management systems and methodologies
9E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- E-mail Concerns
- Inadequate control over creation and maintenance
- If each user is allowed to operate independently
with no established policies or standardized
procedures it can result in chaos
10E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- E-mail Concerns
- Dependence on specific hardware and/or software
for utility - Systems are not universally compatible
- ASPs can be unreliable
- ISPs can have copies of deleted material
11E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Equipment
- Network traffic
- Workstations
- Compatibility
-
- Software Integration
- E-mail, EDMS, Printers
- Software Installation
12E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- E-mail Concerns
- Redundancy of information in electronic and
non-electronic formats - Record disposition often limited to hardcopy
formats only - Electronic copies can reside on backup servers or
third-party sources
13E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- E-mail Concerns
- Limited stability of electronic media
- Valuable records can be lost, changed or
destroyed, inadvertently erased or overwritten - Electronic media is not archival
14E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- E-mail Concerns
- Remote access complicates security
- Unauthorized access to sensitive or confidential
information is a distinct possibility
15E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Technology products (HOW) are fast outdistancing
management and control (HOW TO) - E-mail now includes things like
- Instant Messaging
- Groupware
- Messaging pagers
- PDAs
- Web-enabled mobile phones
- Peer to peer networks
16E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Reasons for E-Mail Management
- 1. E-mail is a record
- 2. E-mail is susceptible to discovery
- 3. Destruction of E-mail may be deemed to
constitute spoliation, evidence tampering or
obstruction of justice
17E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Good E-mail record-keeping requires
- Planning
- being able to distinguish between business and
non-business communications - policies and procedures for managing data
repositories - preparation for response to litigation
18E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Good E-mail record-keeping requires
- Budgeting
- for data migration and conversion
- negotiated contracts in place for scanning and
reproduction when needed
19E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Good E-mail record-keeping requires
- Retention scheduling
- to comply with laws and regulations
- to ensure availability for operational, and
historical purposes - to provide consistent responsibility for all
E-mail disposition
20E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- A September 2002 survey by Cohasset Associates,
Inc. found that - 53 of the over 500 organizations surveyed said
they dont include e-mail in their records
management program - 68 were not at all confident that they could
prove their e-mail records were accurate,
reliable and trustworthy - 39 do not have a formal policy regarding
retention practices for e-mail
21E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Challenges
- Lack of e-mail standards
- Lack of expertise in IT or RIM
- Integration with existing systems
- Corporate culture
- CHANGE!
22E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Legal barriers to electronic document
transactions have fallen with the passage of - Uniform Electronic Transaction Act (UETA)
- Electronic Signature Law (E-SIGN)
- Standards work on how different computer systems
send, receive and read electronic data
23E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Credibility is still a challenge
- The perception that Electronic Records are more
reliable and believable than hardcopy records
because computers dont make mistakes - E-mail, where people say things informally,
without proofreading or thinking of the
consequences or interpretations people will get
from what they say
24E-Mail ManagementThe Great Unknown
- Conclusion
- Few organizations have E-mail under control
- In litigation, the largest cost component is the
discovery of e-records, specifically E-mail - Just having an E-mail Policy is not enough
employees must be educated and trained in how to
use it