Title: July 2005
1Electronic RecordsManagement
2Why have an e-records management program?
- Compliance with federal, state or local
regulations - HIPAA, Sarbanes-Oxley, Gramm-Leach-Bliley, FACTA,
FERPA, CFR, IRS - Control over rogue systems
- Support mission-critical decisions
- Reduce low-quality decisions
- Improve system performance
- Reduce risk and potential for liability
3- Legal status of e-records as records
- Burst.com v. Microsoft
- Zubulake v. UBS Warburg LLC
- Value to organization for administrative,
historical, evidential or longitudinal purposes - Ease of manipulation and mishandling
4Program Elements
- Planning
- Policy development, implementation and compliance
- Technology as de-incentivizer
- The User behavior, demands and perceptions
5 6- The primary benefit of not planning is that
failure will come as a complete surprise rather
than being preceded by a period of worry and
depression. - --Harold Kerzner
7When should planning occur?
- Before e-systems are built
- When other planning initiatives are taking place
- When identifying objectives for programs
8Who should participate?
- Important players
- Users
- IT administrators
- Decision-makers / resource allocators
- Records managers
- Cross-functional team if system is to be
implemented organization-wide
9What should planning cover?
OBSTACLE Funding source Size of project/program Who does the work? Software solutions Is validation required? MILESTONE Justification Scope Project team Selection Security protocols procedures
10What should planning cover?
User training When will system/ program go live? Ongoing system/program management? How will e-files be managed? Training program Implementation Change control Retention and disposition
11PlanningJustification
- Prepare business case
- Align with other organizational goals for
managing records - Provide cost / benefit data
- Provide realistic timeline for program
implementation - Enumerate the risks and potential costs of not
having the program - Be able to back up your request with data
12PlanningScope
- Define the scope of the e-records management
program - Individuals, departments, entire organization?
- Email, desktop, intranet / extranet, websites
- Instant messaging
- Define documentation tools for amending the
program
13PlanningProject team
- Must be accountable for planning and developing
the program - Should be cross-functional
- Executivesolves monetary concerns
- Project managerleads team, tracks budget,
reports to executive - IT analystprovides technical expertise and
necessary system support - Functional area representatives (users)
14PlanningSelection
- Will software be used to manage e-records?
- Research vendors
- Requests for information
- Define functional requirements
- Vendor demos using large data sets
- Select application
15PlanningValidation
- Depending on your environment, you may need to
validate that e-records have not been tampered
with and are authentic - Plan for these validation and security needs
early on
16PlanningTraining
- How will users be trained in e-records
management? - Will training include management of records in
original, digital form?
17PlanningImplementation
- How will the e-records management program be
phased in? - Incrementally
- Organization-wide
- By site
- Who is on call to answer questions?
- Anticipate resistance to new system
18PlanningChange Control
- How will changes in retention requirements of
e-records be handled? - Are requests for changes formal or informal, and
what sort of approval process must they go
through? - How are changes to the program documented?
19PlanningRetention and disposition
- Retention and disposition is affected by
- Corporate policy
- IT infrastructure and management
- E-records management program must attempt to
overcome the retain forever mentality
20- We currently have no guidelines on retention of
records since we do not purge them. We have
experienced unusual requests over the years to
reconstruct statistics from work order data going
back a number of years. It is best that when your
Director asks for something that you don't have
to say we deleted those records last week. We
might be interested in a more formalized
archiving system, but probably not purging the
records. The only reason I could see for even
archiving records would be if system performance
deteriorates, or the number of records created
some inefficiency in an application process.
21The Planning Obstacle...
- Going through these steps requires time and
financial investment. - To succeed, e-records management must remain a
top priority, or resources shift to other
projects leaving the planning phase incomplete.
22 23 Do records-related policies and definitions
include electronic records?
- Statement of purpose clarifies the reason for the
policy - Scope clarifies record types includedshould be
exhaustive - Aids in consistency and reducing variation
24 Having no policy is a policy
- User discretion
- Inconsistent application
- Arbitrary / subjective retention and disposition
decisions
25- Employees with limited perspectives on
management and legal issues should not be relied
upon to make decisions that could affect the
entire business. - --Steven C. Burnett
26Are policies keeping pace with technology?
- Websites / blogs / wikis
- Email and instant messaging
- Unified messaging
- Versioning
- Imaging
- Computer forensics and destruction
- E-commerce
27 Will policies conflict or coincide with culture?
- Depends on your environment
- Depends on newness of the policy and users
familiarity with other records management
principles - When and how policies are applied can be
critical..
28- This is not something you get to decide. This is
company policy. Do not archive your mail. Do not
be foolish. 30 days. - http//www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2095-13674
33,00.html
29The Policy Obstacle...
- Policies governing e-records management must be
comprehensive, addressing as many formats as your
organization handles. - If not following the policies creates unnecessary
risk for your organization, sanctions must be in
place. - The policy obstacle may change based on your
environment.
30 31- It costs you more to think about whether to
delete something than simply to leave it on your
computer. - Tom Burt, Deputy General Counsel at Microsoft
- http//www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/04_51
/b3913099.htm
32IT and Records
- IT community is hard to convince that records
management and e-records preservation are
important - Move toward systems capable of saving everything
- Does technology sneak up on us?
- It is planned, built, and installed BUT
- If not planned people develop own solutions
- Technology is the go to solution
33Different paradigms
- Record series is not such a clear delineation
with e-records unless consciously designed - Filing / organizing becomes moot
34Are the technologically savvy allies or
adversaries for e-records management?
- 10 years worth of data can be kept just as easily
as 1 years worth - Gmail (Search, dont sort and Dont throw
anything away) - Perceived irrelevance of records managers and
archivists
35Storage is cheap
- but e-records management applications are not
- Creates over-abundance of electronic information
- Digital landfills contain obsolete data,
irrelevant data - Overabundance increases risk of low-quality
decisions
36- Transport mechanism for business data
- Example email attachments
- Effect of technology on workflow
- Duplication dilemma
- Productivity
37RMA or EDMS?
- Not transparent
- Turned on or off?
- Expensive
38Databases
- Transactional
- A/P or A/R
- Registrations
- Library books
- Reference
- LexisNexis
- Retention information
- Image banks
39Databases
- Research Rich
- Durable Data
- Relational
- Longitudinal
40- Databases are powerful tools used to compile
statistics or research data, or to track / find
other types of records - Typically cant apply traditional records
management principles to database records
41The Technology Obstacle
- Acts as a de-incentivizer because it installs
the ability to store vast amounts of data and
e-records. - There are fewer reasons to purge e-records once
technology is in place. - The behaviors affected by technology become part
of the organizations culture
42 43Some questions asked
- What criteria do you use to decide to keep and
electronic document? - To delete one?
- Do you follow a schedule for retaining/destroying
files or records? - Do you ever weed files (e.g., word processing
documents) or folders from the hard drive?
44Retention criteria
- Keep
- Anticipated use 40
- Save everything 40
- Delete
- No further use anticipated 20
- Print then delete 5
45Follow a schedule?
46Weed files or folders?
47So what needs to happen?
- Planning
- Ideally before e-systems are built
- As part of other planning initiatives
- Strategically (strategy drives structure)
- Planning requires data
48So what needs to happen?
- Policy
- Reduce user discretion
- Broadcast widely
- Provide justification for policy (legal or
regulatory, efficiency, etc.)
49So what needs to happen?
- Technology
- Recognize the behaviors it installs
- It can reduce or eliminate incentive to manage
e-records - It will usually be part of the solution, not the
entire solution - Identify where technology fits in the entire
system
50So what needs to happen?
- Users
- Identify users perceptions behaviors
- Surveys
- Interviews
- Training, especially for new employees
- Take every opportunity to educate
- Understand how e-records are used and for what
purposes before trying to develop your e-records
management program
51Obstacles
- They exist
- They can be overcome
- They are created by users, the technologies we
employ, inadequate planning, and poorly
constructed policies