Published: August 23, 2005
AIIM Industry Study Reveals ECM Technologies a Core Element in Overall IT Infrastructure
AIIM, the Enterprise Content Management (ECM) industry association, today announced
the findings of their ECM Implementation
Trends industry study
entitled, From Plans to
Projects: How ECM Technologies get Implemented. The study examines
how over 400 different organizations make decisions about implementing Enterprise Content Management (ECM) technologies.
"The core components in evaluating the return on investment (ROI) of an ECM implementation have shifted. In the
early stages of the document and imaging
industry, labor savings and capital expense reductions were the typical
factors used to justify a document
solution. This is perhaps not terribly surprising given that end users
at the time also likely perceived document
solutions as a point solution within a particular department," states
AIIM President John F. Mancini. "As the
realization has spread that ECM
solutions are really part of the overall IT infrastructure, the
importance of productivity and risk reduction benefits has grown."
Key Survey Findings:
ECM technologies are viewed as a core
element in the overall IT infrastructure, and are clearly perceived as more
than simply records management. 82% of
end users see ECM solutions as a core
element in their IT infrastructure (i.e., "a utility service that supports
multiple applications") as opposed to a point solution to a particular
problem (18%).
Overall, the ROI experience of end users with regards to ECM implementations is strikingly positive.
Given the challenges that many end users have experienced in justifying ERP
or CRM implementations, it is important to note that 72% of end users
believe that the ROI of their ECM
implementations has met or exceeded expectations.
The awareness of the importance of managing
documents is on the rise within organizations.
77% of end users believe that effective management of documents is more important
now than two years ago. This rising importance is also reflected in the
number of conversations within organizations relative to the value of ECM investments. Nearly one-third
characterize such conversations as "always" or "frequent" over the past 12
months.
Users are aware of the complexity within their organizations relative to managing information, especially within
large organizations, and the corresponding need to correct this situation.
34% of end users at large organizations believe that there are more than 25
discrete information repositories in
their organization. If you subtract from the sample those who have "no
idea" how many information repositories exist in their organization, the
percentage reporting more than 25 repositories rises to nearly 46%. 73% of
end users have a business need to unify access to and management of these
disparate repositories.
Return on investment is clearly an important criteria for vendor selection,
and becomes more important as the size of the organization increases. 63%
of end users see return on investment as an important criteria for vendor
selection. 44% of those who measure ROI do so within 12 months of
deployment.
In midsize and large organizations IT executives have clearly moved to
center stage in the ECM decision-making
process. When asked who is the most critical executive in making
purchase decisions on ECM solutions, 51%
of midsize organizations and 56% of large organizations answer the "CIO or
head of the IT department." As one would expect, within small
organizations the president or CEO (or in some cases the CFO) are much more
important in the ECM decision-making
process than they are within larger organizations.
Anticipated spending levels clearly reflect the growing segmentation in the
market between solutions that are appropriate to large organizations and
those designed for midsize organizations. Within large organizations, the
emphasis is increasingly on rationalizing and integrating core information management processes. 52% of
end users from large organizations who report spending intentions indicate
that they will spend over $300,000 on ECM
solutions over the next 12 months. Within midsize organizations, the
emphasis is often on document-enabling
existing vertical business applications. While there are significant
numbers of midsize end users who anticipate spending more than $300,000
(14%), the "sweet spot" for suppliers targeting the midsize market appears
to be solutions in the $50,000-$300,000 range (43% of midsize users).
The pitfalls that users experience in procuring an ECM solution point to the need for greater
education about how to effectively identify internal requirements. The
more vocal problems related to poor implementations usually focus on those
that fail because: 1) they were budgeted improperly; 2) there was a
mismatch between project vision and core business objectives; or 3) there
was a lack of management support for the initiative. For most end users,
these are not the core challenges. The core challenges are: 1) defining
core requirements; 2) better education about potential solutions; and 3)
maintaining internal alignment and coordination.
There is clearly a gap in most organizations in understanding ECM. On the plus side, 91% of end users
agree with the statement "the business benefits of ECM solutions are clear to me." That's the
good news. The challenge is that the awareness of ECM solutions and the awareness of the term
itself are still in the early stages. The ECM industry is in a stage of development
that is somewhat similar to the early stages of the evolution of the ERP
industry. 70% of end users disagree with the statement "in my organization
people generally have a good understanding of what the term ECM means." Clearly there is much work
that needs to be done around educating organizations abut the business benefits of ECM.
For a copy of the Executive Summary, go to http://www.aiim.org/viewpd
fa.asp?ID=30327
About the Study
In June 2005, AIIM conducted an industry study to find
out how over 400 different organizations make their decisions about
implementing Enterprise Content
Management (ECM) technologies. The
survey was conducted using an on-line survey instrument, and the survey
population was drawn from AIIM's
community; 84% of the survey participants identified themselves as a member
of AIIM. Respondents were principally
from the United States.
The survey participants are a reflection of the variety of document, IT,
and senior management roles involved in the ECM acquisition process. Survey
participants represent a wide profile of responsibilities within their
organizations. For those reporting a specific role within their
organization, 47% identified themselves as "record or document
practitioners." 34% characterize themselves as "IT managers or
executives," and the remainder were "senior line-of-business or process
owners."
The core demographics of the survey sample were as follows:
Organization size:
-- Small organizations: 19% of the survey participants had 1-100
employees.
-- Midsize organizations: 25% of the survey participants had between 100
and 1000 employees
-- Large organizations: 56% of the survey participants were from
organizations with more than 1,000 employees.
Major vertical industries represented in the survey:
-- Banking and finance - 15%
-- State and local government - 15%
-- IT companies (both ECM and non-ECM companies) - 14%
-- Insurance - 9%
-- Utilities, oil, and gas - 6%
-- Manufacturing and engineering - 6%
About AIIM
AIIM - the international authority on Enterprise Content Management (ECM), is leading the way to the
understanding, adoption and use of ECM
technologies. These technologies, tools, and methods are used to capture, manage, store, preserve, and deliver
content across an enterprise in support of business processes. As a
non-profit association for more than 60 years, AIIM provides news, information and
resources through its website and ongoing education through programs that
include market analysis, industry standards development, elearning courses,
publications, local chapters and regional events. Complete information
about the association, is available on the Web at http://www.aiim.org.
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