Achieving compliance with a CMS, continued
The following quote introduces our last topic on
compliance.
"Integrity without knowledge is weak and useless, and
knowledge without integrity is dangerous and dreadful." (Samuel
Johnson 1709- 84)
Knowledge and integrity have hit the headlines a lot in recent
years as one corporate scandal after another has thrown a spotlight
on how organizations deal with the voluminous and never ending
growth of electronic content around them.
Today, it’s not so much about how organizations wish to
organize themselves but about the growing number of regulations and
legislation that they must comply with in order to continue to do
business effectively.
In many respects, content management sits at the heart of
this, or more specifically, the need to manage knowledge
(unstructured data) with integrity.
Immediacy’s core specialism is web content management and here
we are fortunate that the majority of systems in this part of the
content jigsaw are mature products that have been around for 10
years or more. For a long time, content managed within most
commercial systems at least, has been done so with quite a high
degree of integrity.
As an example, when content is added to an Immediacy system,
it is automatically time-stamped and a range of metadata applied to
it including, primarily, the author. From this point, workflow can
be configured and all subsequent versions of this content are
stored within the system and can then be audited at any
point.
Over the last couple of years, Immediacy has been developing a
document management system to integrate with and complement our web
content management system. A valid observation could be that why
would we bother as there are more than enough document management
systems around. Our response to this is that in developing a system
now, we can more accurately tailor it to the changing needs of
organisations and exploit new technologies that weren’t available
when the more traditional systems were first created.