In Focus: AIIM Study Says It's Not "Why" But "How" You Manage ContentIn Focus: AIIM Study Says It's Not "Why" But "How" You Manage Content

Industry watch study on ECM fails to reveal the types of content mangement systems that users are most interested in.

Doug Henschen, Executive Editor, Enterprise Apps

June 6, 2006

4 Min Read
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Enterprise content management (ECM) deployments are getting more strategic, and process automation and business risk management are te fastest growing project priorities. These are just a few of the key findings of the latest annual "Industry Watch" survey on ECM conducted by AIIM International and released last month. What the study fails to examine, however, is just what type of content management users are most interested in using to meet their diverse needs.

Entitled "Moving From Why? To How?: The Maturing of ECM Users," the 2005-2006 report concludes that ECM implementations have moved from a tactical to a strategic concern. While cost and efficiency continue to be the primary drivers of adoption, performance- and compliance-related concerns have risen in importance (see "Top Drivers of ECM Interest" table, below). "Just as the perception of ECM has changed from a departmental focus to an enterprise/infrastructure focus, the importance of simple cost reduction has diminished relative to higher order value propositions such as 'improving efficiency' and 'increasing profits,'" the study reports.

Top Drivers of ECM interest

'03-'04 Survey

'05-'06 Survey

Cost-Driven Users

56%

44%

Improve efficiency

32%

26%

Source: AIIM '05-'06 Industry Watch study

While most end users now understand why they need to manage content, many still struggle with the "what" and "how" issues related to ECM, the report says. Executives named "justifying the investment" (30 percent), "planning/managing implementation" (27 percent) and "getting employee commitment" (17 percent) as the three biggest obstacles to ECM implementation.

ECM project priorities have remained fairly consistent with last year's results, with "document control," "records management/archiving" and "e-mail management" once again cited among respondents top-three planned pursuits (see "Projects and Applications Under Consideration" table, below). "Process automation" and "business continuity/risk management," moved up to the number five and number six spots, respectively, up from 10 and 13 in the priority rankings in last year's survey.

"There is clearly a greater interest in process automation as organizational experience with ECM increases, particularly among large organizations, reflecting a clear bridge between ECM and BPM technologies," the study asserts. Respondents from among large organizations with extensive ECM experience ranked "process automation" as their number-four priority.

Projects and Applications Under Consideration

Rank

Rank

'05-'06

'04-'05

1. Document Control

2

2. Records Management/Archiving

1

3. E-mail Management

3

4. Information Capture

4

5. Process Automation

10

6. Business Continuity/Risk Mng.

13

7. Library and Knowledge Mng.

7

8. Customer Service (CRM)

11

9. Web Publishing

6

10. Technical Document Mng.

9

Source: AIIM '05-'06 Industry Watch study

Reflecting a bifurcation of the ECM market, the AIIM study revealed that large organizations tend to be experienced with ECM and focused on integrating and extending existing investments while the faster growing community of midsize organizations adopting ECM is looking to spend far less on the technology. Roughly 34 percent of large organizations plan to spend $1 million or more on ECM over the next 12 to 18 months, whereas 54 percent of midsize firms expect to spend between $100,000 and $500,000 on content management software.

Given the bifurcation of the market, future studies of the "ECM" market would do well to study attitudes about different types of content management technologies rather than just lumping a range of technologies under the broad banner of ECM. Alternatives range in cost, complexity and focus from infrastructure-based systems such as Microsoft's planned SharePoint 2007, now set for release in October, to broad ECM suites encompassing everything from document management to e-mail archiving solutions. In between there are still plenty of packaged imaging and workflow-centric solutions aimed at horizontal business applications and vertical industry solutions as well as portals and business process management suites that include content management capabilities. As revealed in this month's Intelligent Enterprise cover story, Hide What's Inside, new alternatives are emerging for content management, so the term "ECM" may be long overdue for an overhaul.

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About the Author

Doug Henschen

Executive Editor, Enterprise Apps

Doug Henschen is Executive Editor of information, where he covers the intersection of enterprise applications with information management, business intelligence, big data and analytics. He previously served as editor in chief of Intelligent Enterprise, editor in chief of Transform Magazine, and Executive Editor at DM News. He has covered IT and data-driven marketing for more than 15 years.

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