BSI PD ISO/TR 22957:2018
$198.66
Document management. Analysis, selection and implementation of enterprise content management (ECM) systems
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2018 | 68 |
This document gives guidelines for a set of procedures and activities to be considered and/or performed by organizations when planning, designing and implementing various enterprise content management (ECM) technologies. The aspects or project phases range from initial business analysis through to vendor/integrator selection and technology implementation. The implementation of processes to manage electronically stored information (ESI) requires significant participation from the affected business units, if the content is stored and managed when created/received and controlled through the information life cycle following organizational policies and/or records retention and control policies are applied. As these efforts require multiple people with different disciplines, including technical teams, records managers and organizational management, this document has been prepared taking those perspectives into account.
This document is applicable to both in-house and outsourced systems, including cloud solutions. It can also be useful when dealing with specialized business systems. The term “enterprise content management (ECM)” (or “document management”) used throughout this document is intended as an all-encompassing term referring to capture technologies [scanning, indexing, optical character recognition (OCR), forms, digital creation, etc.], management technologies (document services, workflow and other work management tools), and storage [primarily non-alterable or write once read many (WORM) technologies]. This document provides information to users related to the technical reports, guidelines and standards that have been developed for technologies commonly available in ECM systems.
This document is not intended to be an all-inclusive paper on electronic document or content management and does not attempt to influence any single technology or provide legal guidance or legal opinions. While there are storage technologies other than optical/magnetic currently available (i.e. microfilm, microfiche and hybrid storage systems) that are not included in this document, those technologies can be reviewed if determined to be appropriate by the end-user organization.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
---|---|
2 | National foreword |
7 | Foreword |
8 | Introduction |
9 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Terms and definitions |
11 | 4 ECM technology 4.1 General 4.2 Functional view of ECM systems |
12 | 4.3 Technical view of ECM systems 4.3.1 Overview |
13 | 4.3.2 Database services 4.3.3 Storage device drivers 4.3.4 ECM application services |
14 | 4.4 Core technologies and application-specific modules 4.4.1 Overview 4.4.2 Document/library services technologies |
15 | 4.4.3 Document imaging technologies |
16 | 4.4.4 Intelligent document recognition |
17 | 4.4.5 Workflow technologies 4.4.6 Records management modules |
18 | 4.4.7 Enterprise report management technologies |
19 | 4.4.8 Forms processing 4.4.9 Optical, mark and intelligent character recognition |
20 | 5 ECM guidelines and standards 5.1 General |
21 | 5.2 Selecting the appropriate guideline or standard 5.2.1 General 5.2.2 Industry guidelines 5.2.3 Trusted system and legal considerations |
23 | 5.2.4 Technology standards 5.2.5 Implementation considerations |
25 | 5.3 Document imaging 5.3.1 User guidelines |
28 | 5.3.2 Implementation considerations |
31 | 5.4 Document/library services 5.4.1 Technology standards 5.4.2 Implementation considerations |
32 | 5.5 Workflow 5.5.1 Technology standards |
33 | 5.5.2 Implementation considerations |
35 | 5.6 Records management 5.6.1 Overview 5.6.2 Records capture |
36 | 5.6.3 Maintenance/use |
38 | 5.6.4 Final disposition of records 6 Considerations for hosted solutions — Trusted third-party repository requirements 6.1 General |
39 | 6.2 Trusted third-party repository services |
40 | 6.3 Requirements of trusted third-party repositories |
41 | 7 Good practices associated with ECM project phases/activities 7.1 Assessing the existing records environment 7.2 Change management 7.2.1 Overview 7.2.2 Champion user participation |
43 | 7.2.3 Change management programme 7.2.4 Communication |
44 | 7.2.5 Project phases and activities |
50 | 7.3 Process/procedure baselining 7.3.1 Overview 7.3.2 High-level baseline |
51 | 7.3.3 Detailed process baselining 7.3.4 Processing metrics |
52 | 7.4 Anticipated processes/procedures |
53 | 7.5 Technology requirements definition 7.6 Document classification and indexing model 7.7 Business objectives and requirements |
54 | 7.8 Technology evaluation guidelines |
55 | 7.9 Forms review and design considerations |
56 | 7.10 Legacy data/document conversion methodology considerations 7.10.1 General 7.10.2 Full back file conversion 7.10.3 Partial back file conversion 7.10.4 As-needed conversion |
57 | 7.11 Procurement document preparation 7.12 Solution/product evaluation guidelines |
59 | 7.13 Project planning and execution 7.14 System, unit testing and project monitoring |
60 | 7.15 Acceptance testing criteria |
61 | 7.16 Rollout planning 7.17 Business practices documentation |
62 | Annex A (informative) Recommended standards and guidelines |
66 | Bibliography |