My friend, and all-around SharePoint Whiz kid Marc Anderson inspired this blog post with a simple tweet “ Form, then function? Or function, then form?
Many of our clients express their need to manage electronic forms more effectively. But the scope of an electronic forms management effort can take many different paths
Here's a short and simple introduction to e-forms . I often use something like it to help clarify all the different types, use cases, applications, vendors, and products associated with electronic forms. If you don't do some basic disentangling at the beginning of an e-forms project, you're likely to have some very confusing conversations. A Quick Introduction to E-Forms from rmedinaslideshare #ScanningandCapture #Adobe #InfoPath #BusinessProcessManagement #electronicforms #e-forms #Livecycle #forms
Form follows function...From an information management perspective, form is location, document format, default metadata, inherited properties
Forms Processing is a proven technology that allows organizations of all sizes to benefit by improving efficiency and decreasing operational costs
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For me, the usual suspects are content management, records, and forms, plus business process management and knowledge management as well
Let's chat for a few minutes and if you don't mind after we're done, take a minute to fill out this quick search form on our site. This way, we'll have on record exactly what you're looking for so you can hold us accountable. Also, it allows us to automate this form to ping the local MLS for matches
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Last year, we set out with AIIM to measure the adoption of automated recognition of both Optical Character Recognition and Intelligent Character Recognition for processing forms. The results were astounding, especially the lack of organizations utilizing automated recognition
That is, they only provide benefit when they emulate the business purpose of the forms and documents being replaced...Download a PDF of this article to share Myth #3: Documents and forms need a handwritten signature
Last week the online business Journal Knowledge at Wharton alerted its readers to a fascinating new management study that creativity is delivered better as a lip service than on listening mode. Actually, that's my own leap. The piece says that corporate America is much better at promoting...