Every business or program must address well-defined objectives
which will add value, either directly to the bottom line or toward
the achievement of the organization's goals and objectives. Records
management (RM) objectives usually fall into one of three
categories:
- Service (effective
and efficient),
- Profit (or
cost-avoidance), and
- Social (moral,
ethical and legal) responsibility.
Records management programs must manage organizational information
so that it is timely, accurate, complete, cost-effective, accessible
and useable. Better information, at the right time, makes better
business.
Records management programs are not generally an organization's
primary business, and even though RM programs don't usually generate
income, the following are the most important reasons to set up a
good records management program in your office anyway.
1. To Control the Creation and Growth of Records
Despite decades of using various non-paper storage media, the
amount of paper in our offices continues to escalate. An effective
records management program addresses both creation control (limits
the generation of records or copies not required to operate the
business) and records retention (a system for destroying useless
records or retiring inactive records), thus stabilizing the growth
of records in all formats.
2. To Reduce Operating Costs
Recordkeeping requires administrative dollars for filing
equipment, space in offices, and staffing to maintain an organized
filing system (or to search for lost records when there is no
organized system).
It costs $22 less per linear foot of records to store
inactive records in the
Usually, in an office that doesn't have a records program,
30-50% of the files could be stored off-site.
3. To Improve Efficiency and Productivity
Time spent searching for missing or misfiled records is
non-productive. A good records management program can help any
organization upgrade its recordkeeping systems so that information
retrieval is enhanced, with corresponding improvements in office
efficiency and productivity. A well designed and operated filing
system with an effective index can facilitate retrieval and deliver
information to users as quickly as they need it.
4. To Assimilate New Records Management Technologies
A good records management program provides an organization
with the capability to assimilate new technologies and take
advantage of their many benefits. Investments in new computer
systems don't solve filing problems unless current manual
recordkeeping systems are analyzed (and occasionally, overhauled)
before automation is applied.
5. To Ensure Regulatory Compliance
In terms of recordkeeping requirements, the
6. To Minimize Litigation Risks
Business organizations implement records management programs
in order to reduce the risks associated with litigation and
potential penalties. This can be equally true in Government
agencies. A consistently applied records management program can
reduce the liabilities associated with document disposal by
providing for their systematic, routine disposal in the normal
course of business.
7. To Safeguard Vital Information
Every organization, public or private, needs a comprehensive
program for protecting its vital records and information from
catastrophe or disaster, because every organization is vulnerable to
loss. Operated as part of the overall records management program,
vital records programs preserve the integrity and confidentiality of
the most important records and safeguard the vital information
assets according to a "Plan" to protect the records.
8. To Support Better Management Decision Making
In today's business environment, the manager that has the
relevant data first often wins, either by making the decision ahead
of the competition, or by making a better, more informed decision. A
records management program can help ensure that managers and
executives have the information they need when they need it.
By implementing an enterprise-wide file organization,
including indexing and retrieval capability, managers can obtain and
assemble pertinent information quickly for current decisions and
future business planning purposes.
9. To Preserve the Corporate Memory
An organization's files contain its institutional memory, an irreplaceable asset that is often overlooked. Every business day, you create the records which could become background data for future management decisions and planning.
10. To Foster Professionalism in Running the Business
A business office with files askew stacked on top of file cabinets and in boxes everywhere creates a poor working environment. The perceptions of customers and the public, and "image" and "morale" of the staff, though hard to quantify in cost-benefit terms, may be among the best reasons to establish a good records management program

