We’ve all seen it happen.
We want to digitize our paper archives. But, instead of just starting with the basics, we jump straight into a 50-point digital transformation plan with AI, auto-classification, roles-based workflows, and wonder if we should consider a sprinkle of blockchain for good measure.
In my interview with Stanford's Melissa Valentine, we talked about how this leads organizations to data quagmires and chasing big ideas without building strong foundations.
Let’s look at why this never works and how to do it better by slowing down.
Like what you see? Want to see more? I invite you to chat with my team at Shinydocs.
Paper documents and archives have served us well over the years, but it’s time to let go.
Here's why paper is a problem:
Digital documents (like searchable PDFs) solve all of the paper problems.
Here are the benefits of digital over paper:
The benefits of going digital seem straight-forward and the process to digitize should be simple, right?
Maybe not. This is the area I see so many struggle with and here's why.
Here’s the straightforward 2-step process that works IF you don’t over-complicate it:
Using scanning and optical character recognition (OCR), capture your paper documents digitally.
Then, label them on a shared file system with exactly what’s written on the boxes - there's no need to reinvent the filing system at this point.
Pro tip: Use fast, local file storage for quickest and least expensive access.
Once indexed, people can search by the content, not just by label.
That’s it. You might be done at this point. If your team can find what they need without lifting a box, you’ve already won.
Pro Tip: This is where something like Shinydocs Pro comes in.
Too often, people want to leap straight into things like auto-classification, digital rights management, AI-powered routing, and all the bells and whistles before they’ve even digitized one box.
But why are we talking about step 47 when we haven’t even nailed steps 1 and 2?
We overthink the transition. We want the benefits of going digital but try to jump straight to sophisticated tools. As I discussed in my Tech Talent Chat with Deloitte's Dalibor Petrovic, complexity tends to creep in fast and is often unnecessary.
It reminds me of Rube Goldberg's classic "Self-Operating Napkin" machine (Image Source: Wikipedia).
Instead of using a napkin to wipe his chin, "Professor Butts" uses this contraption that runs through the following steps:
Let’s not build a digital mess nobody wants.
Start small. Keep it simple. Make things searchable.
And when you’re ready, you can always build more later (the right way).