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What is Unstructured Document Scanning? Workflow Part IV

A recent press release from Konica Minolta SA (South Africa) prompted me to further explain why structured scanning is a must when scanning paper based documents.

I would have to say that ninety percent of all SMB's (small, mid size business) are scanning the "old fashioned" way with multifunctional copiers.

What is the "old fashioned" way? 

That would be scanning back to one's email address, scanning to a desktop folder, scanning back to "your" folder on a shared drive and even scanning to a USB thumb drive. I've even seen a few clients that are using a TWAIN driver to pull documents into their business line of software!

It's only a matter of time that those scanned documents will be opened, renamed and moved to another location one a time.  What an incredible amount of wasted time right? In addition, scanned files can still be moved the to wrong folders, and deleted.

What is Structured Scanning?

Geesh, I didn't think I would have to think about how to explain this! 

Once the documents are entered in the scanner, our user would then press our "scanning" key or button (soft touch or hard key), once the scanner button is engaged the user would then see "meta data fields" on the copier display. One of these fields might ask you for a case number, the other a purchase order number, another could be the name of account, an address, a zip code. More or less some type of identifier for the document that is about to be scanned. 

The user must enter the information required in the meta data field before the document can be scanned.  Hence we are giving structure to the method of scanning, every scan has a job number, an account number, a zip code, an address, etc. 

Structured scanning saves time, and reduces errors that occur in the manual process of scanning each document one at a time.

How Can We Accomplish Structured Scanning?

Structured scanning can be accomplished with adding various third party capture software to your multifunctional copier.  Most of these capture programs will need to be loaded on a server and within the multifunctional copier. 

Here's a few that I know of:

NSI AutoStore

ECopy

CCScan

In addition once these documents are captured and processed they can be easily routed to pre-defined workflows.

Costing

Depending on how deep you want to go with "structure scanning" cost can start for as little as $30 per month.  Well worth the investment since I see many accounts spending one or more hours a day scanning, naming and moving documents the "old fashioned" way.

-=Good Selling=-

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