4 Steps to Becoming a Paper-Light Office |
By Allen Podraza |
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![]() If you are not a believer in the 100% paperless office, how about taking steps towards achieving a paper-light office? I know based on my first-hand experience that organizations can successfully create a paper-light office. With the right level of time and commitment, organizations might be surprised to know they can probably eliminate up to 75% of the paper they currently have filling up their filing cabinets and taking up valuable office space. In order to reduce the amount of paper stored and used in your organization and reap the many benefits of a paper-light office, I offer the following advice: Step 1: Commit to the paper-light initiative. Your organization’s senior management needs to endorse and support this initiative. Staff needs to understand the benefits of creating a paper-light environment and be given the training, hands-on support and tools to achieve the initiative. In order for your organization to achieve a paper-light status, employees across your organization need to make a commitment to change. People who have been making photocopies of every electronic document they receive, sending and receiving paper faxes, putting documents in filing cabinets and saving paper they just cannot part with are going to have to change. Change in the way they think and change in the way they work, which will require the use of some new policies, processes and technologies. Step 2: Incorporate best records management practices into your operations. Start by developing and implementing a records retention schedule, policies and a secure records destruction process. The records retention policies provide guidance on what records must be retained and what paper records you can destroy now. Step 3: Eliminate paper currently filling up those file cabinets. (This will probably require conducting several record clean-up days.) Once you have a records retention and destruction process in place, you can begin reviewing your existing paper records and shred records that have exceeded established record retention periods.
Step 4: Stay paper-light Once you have successfully reduced the paper in your office, you need to establish a strategy to maintain and improve day-forward paper-light status. You need to establish paper-light policies, eliminate old paper printing and filing habits and implement new electronic processes and filing systems to ensure your organization stays paper-light. These processes must incorporate good records management practices, eliminating the possibility of creating an electronic mess.
There is a variety of software and technology available to assist you in automating processes and achieving your paper-light initiative:
Allen Podraza is the director of records management and archives for the American Medical Association in Chicago. He is a certified information professional that advocates all organizations develop a strategy for managing their information. This content originally appeared on the Allen Podraza's LinkedIn Posts. Follow his posts or on Twitter @AllenPodraza. |