Managing Electronic Records: Methods, Best Practices, and Technologies

Höfundur Robert Smallwood

Útgefandi Wiley Professional Development (P&T)

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781118218297

Útgáfa 1

Útgáfuár 2013

13.590 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Managing Electronic Records
  • Contents
  • Foreword
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgments
  • PART ONE E‐Records Concepts
  • Chapter 1 E‐Records Definitions, Business Drivers, and Benefits
  • Records Management Business Rationale
  • Why Is Records Management So Challenging?
  • Benefits of Electronic Records Management
  • Additional Intangible Benefits
  • Notes
  • Chapter 2 Information Governance: The Crucial First Step
  • First, Better Policies; Then, Better Technology for Better Enforcement
  • Defining Information Governance
  • Stakeholder Consultation Is Key
  • Accountability Is Key
  • Why IG Is Good Business
  • Impact of a Successful IG Program
  • Critical Factors in an IG Program
  • Who Should Determine IG Policies?
  • Notes
  • Chapter 3 Generally Accepted Recordkeeping Principles®
  • The Principles
  • Accountability
  • Transparency
  • Integrity
  • Protection
  • Compliance
  • Availability
  • Retention
  • Disposition
  • Assessment and Improvement Roadmap
  • Generally Accepted Recordkeeping Principles® Benchmarks
  • Notes
  • Chapter 4 Managing E‐Documents and Records
  • Enterprise Content Management
  • Document Management Principles
  • Electronic Document Management Systems
  • Electronic Records Management
  • Records Management Principles
  • ERM Principles in Detail
  • Accessibility and Readability over Time
  • Appraisal of Records
  • Audit Trail
  • Authenticity
  • Business Classification Schemes
  • Central Repository
  • Collaboration
  • Disposition: Transfer, Destruction, Preservation
  • Document Scanning
  • File Formats
  • Metadata
  • Physical Records Management
  • Retention Scheduling
  • Search and Retrieval
  • Security and Access Control
  • Storage Media
  • Version Control
  • Vital Records
  • Workflow
  • Notes
  • PART TWO E‐Records Fundamentals
  • Chapter 5 Inventorying E‐Records
  • The Generally Accepted Recordkeeping Principles ®
  • E‐Records Inventory Challenges
  • Records Inventory Purposes
  • Records Inventorying Steps
  • Goals of the Inventory Project
  • Scoping the Inventory
  • Management Support: Executive Sponsor
  • Information/Elements for Collection
  • Creating a Records Inventory Survey Form
  • Who Should Conduct the Inventory?
  • Determine Where Records Are Located
  • Conduct the Inventory
  • Analyze and Verify the Results
  • UK Approach to the Records Inventorying Process
  • Stage 1: Creating a Project Schedule and Plan
  • Stage 2: Clear Communication of Business Objectives and Scope
  • Stage 3: Tailoring the Records Inventory Survey
  • Stage 4: Inventory Form Fulfillment
  • Stage 5: Records Inventory Tabulation and Documentation
  • Stage 6: Ongoing Inventorying Program Requirements
  • Appraising the Value of Records
  • Ensuring Adoption and Compliance of RM Policy
  • Notes
  • Chapter 6 Taxonomy Development for E‐Records
  • Importance of Navigation and Classification
  • When Is a New Taxonomy Needed?
  • Taxonomies Improve Search Results
  • Records Grouping Rationale
  • Business Classification Scheme, File Plans, and Taxonomy
  • Classification and Taxonomy
  • Metadata and Taxonomy
  • Prebuilt versus Custom Taxonomies
  • Controlled Vocabularies and Hierarchical Taxonomies
  • Thesaurus Use in Taxonomies
  • Taxonomy Types
  • Which Taxonomy Type Should You Use?
  • Taxonomy Project Planning
  • Leveraging Subject Matter Experts
  • Gather Existing Information Sources
  • Document Inventory
  • Business Process Analysis
  • Construct the Taxonomy
  • What to Do with Items That Do Not Neatly Fit
  • Taxonomy Testing: A Necessary Step
  • Taxonomy Maintenance
  • Taxonomy Management Tools for Continued Maintenance
  • Social Tagging and Folksonomies
  • Notes
  • Chapter 7 Developing Retention Schedules for E‐Records
  • What Is a Records Retention Schedule?
  • Benefits of a Retention Schedule
  • General Principles of Retention Scheduling
  • Developing a Records Retention Schedule
  • Why Are Retention Schedules Needed?
  • Information Included on Retention Schedules
  • Steps in Developing a Records Retention Schedule
  • What Records Do You Have to Schedule? Inventory and Classification
  • Rationale for Records Groupings
  • Records Series Identification and Classification
  • Retention of E‐Mail Records
  • How Long Should You Keep Old E‐Mail?
  • Destruction Retention of E‐mail
  • Records Appraisal: Value Assessment and Prioritization
  • Types of Records Values
  • Legal Staff Research and Input Is Essential in Determining Legal Value
  • Estimating the Value of Financial Records
  • Determining Scientific or Technical Value of Records
  • Long‐Term Archival Records
  • Records Having Evidential Value
  • Records Having Informational Value
  • Assigning Time Periods to Records Values
  • Meeting Legal Limitation Periods
  • Legal Requirements and Compliance Research
  • Event‐Based Retention Scheduling for Disposition of E‐Records
  • Prerequisites for Event‐Based Disposition
  • Final Disposition and Closure Criteria
  • Retention Periods: Online versus Offline
  • Closure Dates
  • Retaining Records Indefinitely
  • Retaining Transitory Records
  • Implementation of the Retention Scheduleand Disposal of Records
  • Getting Acceptance and Formal Sign‐Off of the Retention Schedule
  • Disposition Timing: Records Disposal
  • Automating Retention/Disposal Actions
  • Disposal Date Changes
  • Proving Record Destruction
  • Ongoing Maintenance of the Retention Schedule
  • Audit to Manage Compliance with the Retention Schedule
  • Notes
  • Chapter 8 Managing Vital E-Records
  • Defining Vital Records
  • Types of Vital Records
  • Impact of Losing Vital Records
  • Creating, Implementing, and Maintaininga Vital Records Program
  • Essential Steps to Implementing a Vital Records Program
  • U.S. National Archives Approach to Identify Vital Records
  • Critical Identifiers for Vital Records
  • Implementing Protective Procedures
  • Instant Continuous Backup
  • Off‐site Continuity Options
  • Cloud Computing Offers a New Option
  • Auditing the Vital Records Program
  • Additional Resources
  • Notes
  • Chapter 9 ERM Link to Business Process Improvement
  • Improving Processes, Improving Quality
  • Six Sigma
  • Learning from the Failures of the Past
  • Typical Components When Improving a Business Process
  • Business Process and E‐Records Link
  • Documenting Business Processes
  • First Steps in Documenting a Process: Information Gathering
  • Creating a Process Narrative
  • Flowcharting
  • Process Analysis
  • Workflow
  • E‐Records Are Very Personal to People
  • Change Management
  • Communicate, Communicate, Communicate
  • Find the Source; Avoid the Cycle
  • Avoid Scope-creep: Defining “The Project” and Its Scope
  • Changing Processes Gets Personal
  • Notes
  • Chapter 10 Workflow and Business Process Management Software
  • Workflow Software
  • Business Process Management Suites
  • Notes
  • PART THREE Information Delivery Platforms: Managing E‐Records
  • Chapter 11 Managing E‐Mail and IM Records
  • Employees Regularly Expose Organizations to E‐Mail Risk
  • E‐Mail Polices Should Be Realistic and Technology Agnostic
  • E‐Record Retention: Fundamentally a Legal Issue
  • Preserve E‐Mail Integrity and Admissibilitywith Automatic Archiving
  • E‐Mail Archiving Rationale: Compliance, Legal, and Business Reasons
  • Don’t Confuse E‐Mail Archiving with Backup
  • No Personal Archiving in the Workplace
  • Are All E‐Mails Records?
  • Destructive Retention of E‐Mail
  • Instant Messaging
  • Best Practices for Business IM Use
  • Technology to Monitor IM
  • Tips for Safer IM
  • Notes
  • Chapter 12 Managing E‐Records in the Cloud
  • Defining Cloud Computing
  • Key Characteristics of Cloud Computing
  • What Cloud Computing Really Means
  • Cloud Deployment Models
  • Greatest Security Threats to Cloud Computing
  • Document and Data Breaches
  • The Enemy Within: Insider Threats
  • Hacking and Rogue Intrusions
  • Insecure Points of Cloud Connection
  • Issues with Multitenancy and Technology Sharing
  • Hacking, Hijacking, and Unauthorized Access
  • Who Are Your Neighbors?
  • IG Guidelines: Managing Documents and Records in the Cloud
  • Managing E‐Docs and Records in the Cloud: A Practical Approach
  • Long‐Term Content Migration Issues
  • Cloud Services Lack Basic Records Management Capabilities
  • Notes
  • Chapter 13 Managing Social Media Business Records
  • Types of Social Media in Web 2.0
  • Additional Social Media Categories
  • Social Media in the Enterprise
  • Key Ways Social Media Is Different from E‐Mail and Instant Messaging
  • Biggest Risks of Social Media
  • Legal Risks of Social Media Posts
  • Tools to Archive Social Media
  • IG Considerations for Social Media
  • Key Social Media Policy Guidelines
  • Records Management Considerations for Social Media
  • Records Retention Guidelines
  • Content Control Models
  • Emerging Best Practices for Managing Social Media Records
  • Notes
  • Chapter 14 SharePoint Governance for E‐Records and Documents
  • Process Change, People Change
  • Where to Begin the Planning Process
  • Begin at a High Level
  • Establish Scope
  • Records Management Policy Considerations
  • Roles and Responsibilities
  • Establish Processes
  • Training Plan
  • Communications Plan
  • Notes
  • PART FOUR Technical Issues
  • Chapter 15 International E‐Records Standards
  • Benefits of Standards
  • Major International Standards
  • Additional Guidance from ANSI, ARMA, AIIM, NIST, BSI
  • Major National and Regional ERM Standards
  • United States E‐Records Standard
  • Canadian Standards and Legal Considerations for Electronic Records Management
  • U.K. and European Standards
  • Australian ERM and Records Management Standards
  • Other National Standards
  • Brazil
  • Finland
  • Germany
  • New Zealand
  • Norway
  • Where to Find More Information on ERM Standards
  • Notes
  • Chapter 16 Metadata Governance, Standards, and Strategies
  • Types of Metadata
  • Core Metadata Issues
  • International Metadata Standards and Guidance
  • ISO 15489 Records Management Definitions and Relevance
  • ISO Technical Specification 23081–1: 2006 Information and Documentation—Records Management Proce
  • Dublin Core Metadata Initiative
  • Global Information Locator Service
  • National Metadata Standards
  • United States
  • Canada
  • United Kingdom
  • Australia
  • Metadata Strategies
  • Notes
  • Chapter 17 Long‐Term Digital Preservation
  • Defining Long‐Term Digital Preservation
  • Key Factors in Long‐Term Digital Preservation
  • Threats to Preserving Records
  • Digital Preservation Standards
  • ISO TR 18492 (2005), Long‐Term Preservation of Electronic Document‐Based Information
  • ISO 16363 (2012)—Space Data and Information Transfer Systems—Auditand Certification of Trustwort
  • PREMIS Preservation Metadata Standard
  • Recommended Open‐Standard Technology‐Neutral Formats
  • ISO 19005 (PDF/A)—Document Management—Electronic Document File Format for Long‐Term Preservati
  • Extensible Markup Language (XML)—World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Internet Engineering Group (1998)
  • Tagged Image File Format: 1992
  • ISO/IEC 15498: 2004—Information Technology‐Computer Graphics and Image Processing‐Portable Net
  • Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG): 2003. W3C Internet Engineering Task Force
  • ISO/IEC 15444:2000—Joint Photographic Engineers Group (JPEG 2000)
  • ISO/IEC 13818–3: 2000—Motion Picture Expert Group (MPEG‐2)
  • European Broadcasting Tech 3285: 2011—Broadcast Wave Format (BWF)
  • ISO 28500: 2009—WebARChive (WARC)
  • Digital Preservation Requirements
  • Long‐Term Digital Preservation Capability Maturity Model®
  • Stage 5: Optimal Digital Preservation Capability
  • Stage 4: Advanced Digital Preservation Capability
  • Stage 3: Intermediate Digital Preservation Capability
  • Stage 2: Minimal Digital Preservation Capability
  • Stage 1: Nominal Digital Preservation Capability
  • Scope of the Capability Maturity Model
  • Digital Preservation Capability Performance Metrics
  • Digital Preservation Strategies and Techniques
  • Evolving Marketplace
  • Looking Forward
  • Notes
  • Chapter 18 Storage and Hardware Considerations
  • The Onslaught of “Big Data”
  • Basic Types of Computer Storage
  • Today’s E‐Records Storage Solutions
  • Nonerasable Nonrewritable Requirement for Securities Broker‐Dealers
  • Nonalterable Media Helps Meet Regulations in Healthcare and Other Industries
  • Notes
  • PART FIVE Project and Program Management Issues
  • Chapter 19 E‐Records Project Planning and Program Management Issues
  • Avoiding Problems
  • Communication Is Key
  • Getting an Early Win
  • Selecting the Right Team Members
  • Project Charter
  • Standards in Project Management
  • Project Management Methodologies
  • Project Management Body of Knowledge
  • MIKE2.0 Enterprise Information Management Methodology
  • PRINCE2™
  • Determining the Best Approach
  • Moving to an Ongoing Program
  • Monitoring and Accountability
  • Continuous Process Improvement
  • Why Continuous Improvement Is Needed
  • Notes
  • Chapter 20 Building the Business Case to Justify an ERM Program
  • Determine What Will Fly in Your Organization
  • Strategic Business Drivers for Project Justification
  • Benefits of Electronic Records Management
  • Presenting the Business Case
  • Notes
  • Chapter 21 Securing Executive Sponsorship
  • Executive Sponsor Role
  • Project Manager: Key Tasks
  • It’s the Little Things
  • Evolving Role of the Executive Sponsor
  • Notes
  • Chapter 22 Procurement Governance: The Buying Process
  • Evaluation and Selection Process: RFI, RFP, or RFQ?
  • Request for Information
  • Request for Proposal
  • Request for Quote
  • Negotiated Procurement
  • Evaluating Software Providers: Key Criteria
  • Technological Fit
  • Company Viability
  • Track Record
  • Support
  • Access to Senior Management
  • Partnerships
  • Technology Architecture and Scalability
  • Total Cost of Ownership
  • Ease of Implementation and Use
  • Training
  • Negotiating Contracts: Ensuring the Decision
  • More Contract Caveats
  • How to Pick a Consulting Firm: Evaluation Criteria
  • Notes
  • Chapter 23 Best Practices for Electronic Records Management
  • Detailed ERM Best Practices
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Appendix A Laws and Major Regulations Related to Records Management
  • Appendix B Listing of Technology and Service Providers
  • Appendix C Trends in Electronic Medical Records Technology
  • Glossary
  • About the Author
  • About the Major Contributors
  • Index
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