Data. We (as organisations) store vast amounts of it, whether digital or paper records. Depending on the type of data, organisations are required to keep and/or destroy some of those records - potentially driven by GDPR or government legislation.
Whether a micro-business or large corporation, the volume of information to manage does not always correlate directly with the size of the organisation. Who is going to manage all those documents to ensure your organisation remains compliant, not only with law but perhaps your own ISO accreditation? Where is the employee time going to come from to review all those folders and work through what stays and what goes?
First and foremost, you need to be aware of the guidelines that govern the retention of your data. The two tables further down can help with a general view but of course there may be other specific requirements related to your specific sector.
Simply put, the only effective (time, cost and consistency) way to manage any volume of documentation governed by compliance is to use a Document Management System (DMS) - define retention policies (based on key document information) and utilise automation.
Post Brexit, UK organisations may need to comply with two frameworks for data protection (based on the scope of operations):
Supervisory authorities such as the UK’s ICO (Information Commissioner’s Office) can take a range of alternative actions for GDPR infringements other than fines, including:
The manual method requires your assigned Records Manager (whether for the organisation or department) to:
The managed, automated method requires your records manager to:
Whilst the automated process is not quite ‘hands off’, there is a significant difference in the time required to manage each document over its lifecycle. By automating the catalogue, tracking, reminder and decision process, it also significantly reduces the risk of non-compliance and errors through relying on a manual schedule.
Gartner once quoted an average of 18 minutes to locate a document (without management through a DMS) therefore simply handling 3 documents could take nearly an hour. With a DMS, the Records Manager could be finished with tasks in less than 3 minutes. An oversimplification perhaps but certainly not an exaggeration. Add the spreadsheet maintenance, tracking, reminder management on top and the time ‘wasted’ becomes very apparent.
PacSol can partner with your business to identify, review and recommend an appropriate DMS for your business (that fits your requirements) or help review you existing DMS configuration to optimise records management automation. Contact us today or book one of our free consultation appointments