legal technology innovation

25 06, 2025

5 Keys to Digitizing the File Room

2025-06-23T10:39:06-07:00June 25th, 2025|Paper2Digital Blog|

5 Keys to Digitizing the File Room

Hybrid work has fundamentally reshaped the legal industry. Attorneys move fluidly between home and office, client demands are increasingly real-time, and collaboration can no longer be tethered to a single location. And yet, many law firms remain burdened by one of the most tangible holdovers of the pre-digital era: the physical file room. In a market where agility, cost-efficiency, and risk mitigation are top priorities, digitizing the file room isn’t just operationally beneficial—it’s a strategic necessity.

Digitization may seem straightforward, but the difference between a smooth project and a stalled one often comes down to planning and execution. Based on years of experience and the evolving needs of today’s law firms, here are the five essential keys to a successful file room digitization initiative:

  1. Inventory: Scope Before You Scan

No digitization project can begin effectively without first understanding the size and shape of the challenge. Taking inventory isn’t just about counting boxes; it’s about understanding what kind of documents you’re dealing with, how they’re stored, and how difficult they will be to handle. Materials in binders, bound volumes, or mixed formats require significantly more time and care during prep—making labor costs balloon if not properly scoped.

A comprehensive inventory helps firms estimate staffing requirements, plan physical logistics, and develop a timeline that aligns with other key milestones—such as office moves or renovations. It also enables early identification of high-effort documents that may be deprioritized or handled separately. And since labor is often the most expensive part of a backfile scanning project (not the technology), accurately scoping your inventory is the best way to stay on budget.

Importantly, inventorying gives firms control over the digitization process. It shifts the conversation from “How fast can we scan this room?” to “What is most important to scan, and why?” That mindset is the hallmark of a strategic approach.

  1. Prioritization: Start Smart, Not Just Fast

Once you know what you have, the next question is: what matters most? Not all records are equally valuable or time-sensitive. Prioritizing which files to digitize first allows firms to focus their resources where they will have the greatest impact. Active matters, for example, should be at the front of the line. Scanning them immediately enhances accessibility for attorneys and eliminates the need to retrieve or transport paper documents between locations.

Similarly, recently closed matters should be digitized before they are shelved. This is a key opportunity—those files are entering the system for storage anyway, and digitizing them upfront means they’ll never take up space in the physical file room. Conversely, legacy files or documents that are already scheduled for offsite storage or destruction may be deprioritized or omitted entirely.

Prioritization also reduces organizational friction. It allows firms to move forward incrementally, testing workflows and building internal capacity without biting off more than they can chew. A phased approach, rooted in strategic prioritization, gives firms a manageable path forward and sets the stage for sustained success.

  1. Integration: Leverage the Systems You Already Have

The good news is that most law firms already have a powerful tool in place that can accelerate a digitization project: their records management system (RMS). When properly maintained, the RMS is a detailed catalog of what’s in the file room—file names, folder structures, practice areas, retention status, and more. Rather than recreating this data manually during the scanning process, smart digitization strategies integrate with the RMS to automate metadata entry and minimize human error.

By incorporating barcoding and digital workflows, firms can pre-populate profiling fields directly from their existing systems. This automation doesn’t just improveaccuracy—it speeds the entire operation. And perhaps most importantly, it enables the use of temporary or third-party labor. Staff without institutional knowledge of the records can effectively profile scanned files by simply scanning barcodes and following preset workflows, all backed by data from the RMS.

This is a force multiplier. It transforms what could be a tedious, error-prone, and resource-heavy process into a repeatable, efficient, and cost-effective one. Integrating your digitization efforts with your RMS also strengthens compliance and record-keeping, creating a single source of truth for both physical and digital records.

  1. Labor Strategy: Treat It Like a Scan Factory

Digitizing the file room is not a one-person job. It’s a multi-step, team-based workflow—more akin to a factory floor than a traditional office project. It includes prepping files (removing staples, organizing pages), profiling them (adding metadata), scanning the documents, and performing quality control (ensuring image and data accuracy). Each of these steps has different skill and labor demands, and balancing them requires intentional staffing and process design.

Unfortunately, most law firms don’t have the internal bandwidth to dedicate full-time employees to backfile projects. That’s why outsourcing—whether to facilities management (FM) teams, temp staff, or professional scanning vendors—is often the only practical option. These third parties bring experience, flexibility, and the ability to scale quickly. For particularly sensitive files, like HR or personnel records, bringing in disinterested third-party workers can even reduce privacy risks.

An effective labor strategy includes cross-training, so workers can shift between tasks based on project bottlenecks or volume surges. For example, if quality control is slowing down while scanning is ahead of schedule, staff can be temporarily reassigned. This kind of dynamic, load-balanced staffing keeps projects moving and minimizes downtime—critical for projects with hard deadlines like office relocations.

  1. Disposition Policy: Know What Happens After the Scan

What happens to the paper once it’s scanned? This is one of the most overlooked—and most important—questions in any digitization project. Without a clear disposition policy, scanned files can pile up in boxes, taking up just as much space and posing just as much risk as they did before. Worse, they can become a source of confusion or noncompliance if duplicate paper records remain in circulation.

Disposition planning should start at the very beginning of the project. Firms need to determine what materials can be destroyed, which must be retained physically, and how decisions will be documented. The goal is to minimize the amount of paper retained, and to do so in a defensible, policy-driven manner. Most digitized records can be shredded—especially given that 70% of file room paper is typically a duplicate of documents already in the document management system.

Shredding not only frees up space and reduces costs, it strengthens information governance. It simplifies legal hold processes, reduces liability, and ensures that the firm knows exactly what records exist, in what format, and where. Having a disposition policy in place also helps the digitization team work more efficiently—eliminating the bottleneck of “scan and wait” paper piles and enabling clean handoffs from digitization to destruction.

Final Thoughts: Build the Scanning Muscle Now

Digitizing the file room doesn’t have to wait for a major office move or redesign. In fact, starting small now can better prepare your team for larger projects in the future. Firms can begin by digitizing closed matters, onboarding files from lateral hires, or tackling department-specific archives. These early efforts help build internal expertise, develop repeatable processes, and foster cultural buy-in from attorneys and staff.

The shift to hybrid work has accelerated the urgency of digital transformation—but it has also created an opportunity. Firms are receiving less incoming paper, stakeholders are more comfortable working digitally, and the market has matured with purpose-built technologies to support these transitions. With careful planning and execution, digitizing the file room becomes not just manageable—but transformative.

You may not be able to take the file room with you—but you can take its knowledge and functionality anywhere.

Airmail2 Cloud Digital Records Room Resources

9 04, 2025

5 Advantages of Cloud-Based Paper Scanning: Why Law Firms Must Modernize for the Hybrid Workplace

2025-04-07T12:53:48-07:00April 9th, 2025|Paper2Digital Blog|

5 Advantages of Cloud-Based Paper Scanning: Why Law Firms Must Modernize for the Hybrid Workplace

The legal industry has always been deeply rooted in paper-based processes, but the shift to hybrid work has made it clear: firms can no longer afford to rely on physical documents. Attorneys and legal staff work across multiple locations. Confidential client information must be accessible, secure, and seamlessly integrated into digital workflows.

While many firms have already begun scanning and digitizing their documents, a surprising 61% of paper still requires scanning—underscoring the fact that traditional scanning approaches haven’t fully caught up with the modern workplace.

The question isn’t whether firms should move to digital-first operations- That is a given. The real challenge is… How do firms modernize these workflows in a way that is sustainable, secure, and scalable? This is where cloud-based scanning comes into play.

The Problem with Legacy Scanning Approaches

Most firms have historically relied on on-premises scanning infrastructure—copiers, scanners, and local servers to process and store files. But these old approaches have significant limitations:

  • Limited accessibility – Paper documents only exist in one place at a time, impeding productivity for remote and hybrid workers.
  • Security risks – Paper is easy to misplace, and physical records rooms present compliance challenges.
  • IT complexity – Traditional document scanning is often dependent on IT resources to maintain software, hardware, and infrastructure.
  • Real estate costs – As firms optimize their office footprint, maintaining on-site records storage is expensive and undesireable.

Why Cloud-Based Scanning is the Future: The Top 5 Advantages

Scanning directly to a cloud document repository, firms overcome the challenges of using old methods while unlocking new efficiencies. Here are five key advantages of cloud-based scanning for the hybrid law firm:

  1. Cloud Enables True Anywhere Access

Hybrid work means attorneys and staff are constantly moving between home, office, and client meetings. With cloud-based scanning, legal professionals can instantly access scanned documents from any device, anywhere—without being tethered to a physical office.

This isn’t just about convenience—it’s about business continuity. When critical documents are digitized and stored securely in the cloud, firms reduce the risk of misplaced files, lost mail, or delays caused by in-office dependencies.

Also see: Law Firms Must Transform Mailrooms: 40% of First Class Mail Now Takes Longer

  1. Security and Compliance are Strengthened

With client confidentiality and data security being paramount, law firms must ensure that scanned documents are protected at every stage. Cloud-based solutions leverage enterprise-grade encryption, secure access controls, and standards for operational controls like SOC 2 Type 2, ensuring that sensitive legal records remain safe from breaches, loss, or unauthorized access.

Beyond security, compliance and governance are also simplified. Unlike paper records, which are difficult to track and audit, cloud-based systems provide a clear digital chain of custody. This is important to enforce document retention policies and meet regulatory requirements.

  1. Eliminating IT Bottlenecks with Faster, Simpler Deployment

One of the biggest barriers to modernization in legal tech is IT backlog. Traditional on-premises scanning solutions often require months of setup and dedicated IT resources. Cloud-based scanning is easy to adopt because it removes this friction:

  • No on-premises infrastructure to maintain
  • No major IT project, simple cloud configuration
  • Rapid deployment enables firms to go live in weeks, not months

By eliminating IT roadblocks, firms can modernize faster while keeping limited IT resources focused on strategic initiatives.

  1. Cost Efficiency and Real Estate Optimization

Law firms are reducing their office footprints, and physical records storage is an undesirable cost. Moving scanning to the cloud allows firms to:

  • Free up valuable office space previously dedicated to file rooms
  • Reduce spending for on-premises scanning infrastructure
  • Shift to a subscription-based model, eliminating large upfront IT investments

Ultimately, this approach aligns with law firms’ broader digital transformation strategies, allowing them to be more cost-efficient and more responsive to clients.

  1. On-Demand Image Processing Solves Scanning Volume Uncertainty

Paper volumes fluctuate. The quantity of mail can periodically spike, case files accumulate before trial, and large digitization projects require bursts of processing power. Traditional scanning infrastructure is fixed so firms either underutilize resources or struggle with bottlenecks.

Cloud-based scanning introduces on-demand scalability to dynamically scale up based on real-time needs. No need for expensive hardware upgrades or waiting for IT teams to provision new servers—scanning operational capacity expand instantly as needed.

The Shift is Happening—Is Your Firm Ready?

The legal industry has reached a critical turning point. Hybrid work, security concerns, and the cost of real estate are forcing firms to rethink paper records scanning. Firms that still rely on manual, on-premises scanning workflows will find themselves at a disadvantage. The inefficiencies, security risks, and escalating costs are impediments to a law firm’s success and future growth.

Cloud-based scanning is not an IT upgrade— it’s a strategic imperative. Firms that embrace this shift gain agility, security, and cost-efficiencies.

For legal professionals looking to future-proof their operations, the time to transition is now. Firms that act decisively will have an advantage from utilizing an everyday solution that improves responsiveness to clients.

Airmail2 Cloud Digital Mailroom Resources

24 03, 2025

The Future of Mail and Records in a Hybrid World: How Airmail2 Cloud Delivers Secure, Digital Solutions

2025-03-24T10:51:58-07:00March 24th, 2025|Paper2Digital Blog|

The Future of Mail and Records in a Hybrid World: How Airmail2 Cloud Delivers Secure, Digital Solutions

The shift to a hybrid workforce has fundamentally changed how businesses and law firms manage mail and records. For decades, paper-based processes were standard practice, but today are a liability. The inefficiencies, security risks, and costs of maintaining traditional mail and records rooms are pushing organizations to re-think their approach.

At DocSolid, we’ve built Airmail2 Cloud, a purpose-built cloud SaaS solution that digitizes and optimizes mail and records operations, ensuring secure, streamlined access from anywhere. Whether you are are a optimizing your firm’s real estate footprint, a corporate legal department seeking stronger compliance, or a commercial business focused on improving workflow efficiency, Airmail2 Cloud helps modernize document management for a digital-first world.

 Why Paper-Based Mail and Records No Longer Work

Many firms made abrupt shifts to digital processes in recent years, including scanning and distributing mail electronically. These makeshift digital mailrooms allowed operations to continue, but they lack structure, governance, and security. Firms still operating with temporary, inefficient workflows need to consider the risks:

  • Security & Compliance Risks – Scanned PDFs are often attached to emails and sent without tracking or governance, increasing the risk of breaches, lost documents, and regulatory violations.
  • Inefficiencies & Cost Burdens – Firms physically deliver mail after scanning it, duplicating efforts and creating unnecessary work. Many continue to pay for file rooms and paper-based workflows despite shrinking office space.
  • Hybrid Work Challenges – With attorneys and professionals working two to three days per week remotely, firms must ensure seamless, digital access to mail and records from anywhere.

The solution? A structured, purpose-built digital mail and records management system purpose-built for the hybrid workplace.

Introducing Airmail2 Cloud: A Purpose-Built Solution for the Hybrid Workplace

Unlike generic scanning solutions, Airmail2 Cloud is engineered specifically for digital mailrooms and records rooms, offering a secure, automated, and fully governed workflow.

Digital Mailroom Solution

How it Works:

  • Secure, DMS-Centric Delivery – Mail is automatically scanned, tagged, and routed directly into the firm’s document management system (DMS), including iManage, NetDocuments, SharePoint, and OneDrive. No more scattered PDFs floating in email inboxes.
  • Smart Notifications & Structured Workflows – Users receive email notifications with secure links, avoiding governance risks associated with PDF attachments.
  • Customizable Mail Processing – Firms can configure rules for mail delivery, ensuring the right documents reach the right people with minimal manual handling.

Why It Matters:

  • Eliminates unstructured, makeshift scanning processes that lack governance
  • Reduces the costs and inefficiencies of physical mail distribution
  • Ensures attorneys and staff can access mail seamlessly—whether at home or in the office

Digital Records Room Solution

How it Works:

  • Structured Record Profiling & DMS Integration – Mailroom and records staff index documents into the correct matter file, client folder, or department archive without requiring direct DMS access.
  • Automated Paper Disposition Tracking – Firms can digitally manage paper documents from scan to secure destruction, reducing the need for on-site file rooms.
  • Enterprise-Grade Compliance & Audit Trails – Every scanned document is tracked, ensuring firms meet regulatory and security standards.

Why It Matters:

  • Supports law firm real estate reductions by eliminating paper-based file rooms
  • Ensures critical records are accessible—without relying on physical retrieval
  • Enhances document security and compliance, reducing exposure to breaches and malpractice risks

Built for Law Firms—Trusted Across Industries

DocSolid is a proven leader in digital mail and records solutions, with a track record of success with many of the largest law firms, corporate legal departments, and commercial businesses in the world.

Airmail2 Cloud is growing in usage beyond the legal market as many types of business discover the benefits of a cloud-based scanning solution. Companies in staffing, insurance, finance, and professional services are leveraging Airmail2 Cloud to modernize document workflows and improve information governance.

Certified integrations with leading document management platforms—including iManage, NetDocuments, Microsoft OneDrive, and SharePoint— make Airmail2 Cloud easy for any organization to choose.

Ready to Future-Proof Your Mail and Records Management?

If your firm or organization is still relying on outdated mail and records processes, now is the time to modernize.

✔ Reduce costs by eliminating physical mailrooms and file storage
✔ Strengthen governance with a structured, DMS-centric approach
✔ Improve efficiency with automated workflows and secure, cloud-based delivery

Want to learn more?  Email us at hello@docsolid.com or visit our website to see how Airmail2 Cloud can transform your mail and records management.

Airmail2 Cloud Digital Mailroom Resources

25 08, 2024

DocSolid’s Airmail2 Cloud Takes Flight, from the Flight Plan™ to SOC2

2025-02-20T12:25:49-07:00August 25th, 2024|Paper2Digital Blog|

DocSolid’s Airmail2 Cloud
Takes Flight
From the Flight Plan to SOC2

DocSolid introduced the Airmail2 Cloud Digital Mailroom and Digital Records Room solutions in 2024 with integrations to cloud-based document management systems like iManage, NetDocuments, Microsoft OneDrive and SharePoint. Our patented batch scanning with barcode labels has gone through several generations of technology advancements over the past ten years, but provisioning it in a cloud SaaS platform presented a whole new level of challenges and requirements for us. It not only changed the product, but it also changed our company. These changes include new technologies, more security and reinventing our deployment model. Here is a recap of our 18 month journey bringing Airmail2 Cloud to market.

The Hybrid Workplace in 2024
Hybrid Workplace Solution - Return to Office - Work From HomeAirmail2 was originally introduced in 2020 as a software solution installed on premises. It was a timely pivot for DocSolid, anticipating the sea change of remote work commonly described as the hybrid workplace. In general terms, hybrid work refers to employees working 2 or 3 days per week in the office and working from home the other days.

According to research, more than half of law firm employees surveyed confirm that their firm has established a policy that requires lawyers to come in at least three days per week. 85% report a requirement of less than four days per week. Regarding the flexibility of this requirement, 64% report that the overall policy is flexible, allowing staff to largely choose which days they are in the office.1

Hybrid work, particularly in law firms, requires employees to have access to information regardless of whether they are in their home office or downtown office.

Airmail2 Cloud – The Mission

Product Improvements
Airmail2 Cloud is deployed as a separate, private instance for each customer in the Microsoft Azure cloud, managed by DocSolid. This infrastructure tech stack provides network security and a modern approach to scalability with serverless Apps. Supporting multiple identity providers for SSO was also a requirement. A key technical challenge…  Sorting out how scanned documents will be transferred securely into a customer’s Airmail2 Cloud private storage, originating from the existing scanning hardware back down on the ground. This led us to engineer a new software component called the Azure Sender to securely transmit digitized documents from any networked scanning device. Data files are encrypted in transit and at rest, saved in the customer’s Airmail2 Cloud private storage.

Another innovation is DocSolid’s newest generation of Mailman image processing technology. On demand image processing is a new way of deploying Mailman engines in the cloud. If there is a significant increase in the amount of paper being scanned by a customer, they will always have the additional image processing power they need.

Company Improvements
Before launching the product and going to market, the company initiated a comprehensive audit process to assess the readiness of the product, our business policies and operations in accordance with the AICPA (American Institute of Certified Public Accountants) SOC2 (System and Organization Controls). A widely accepted security framework, the SOC2 Type2 attestation confirms a SaaS vendor’s product and operations meet the association’s standards. The core of this standard involves five Trust Services Criteria (TSC); security, privacy, confidentiality, processing integrity, and availability. DocSolid achieved our SOC2 Type2 attestation for Airmail2 Cloud July 4, 2024.

Project Improvements
Another improvement as DocSolid transformed into a SaaS vendor is the Airmail2 Flight Plan.™ The name is derived from our “airmail theme” because it is a superb metaphor for project leadership at DocSolid. In aviation, the flight plan documents where the pilot and crew originated from, their destination, timing, fuel, weather and other specifications. The Airmail2 Cloud Flight Plan™ is a reference guide for each customer, documenting how their system is configured including workflows and settings. It is also a resource to propel adoption and achieve desired business outcomes.

As you might expect, deploying Airmail2 Cloud takes less time than an on premises installation and it simplifies the project for our customers.

Airmail2 Cloud Project Timeline

Discover - Airmail2 Cloud Project Timeline Graphic

  • Project Initiation
  • Kickoff Meeting
  • Educate Project Team
  • Discovery Session(s)
  • Airmail2 Flight Plan™

  • Airmail2 Cloud Provisioning
  • Connect DMS and Scanning Devices
  • Tailor System to Flight Plan
  • System Walkthrough – Acceptance
  • Production Ready

  • Status Meetings through Launch
  • Rollout to Launch Office(s)
  • 1 Month – Launch Feedback
  • 6 Months – Metrics Review
  • Solution Assessment

Conclusion
In 18 months, Airmail2 Cloud was built, tested and independently audited. Since then, we have onboarded our first new customers. Existing DocSolid customers are now switching from older on prem installations to Airmail2 Cloud.

Welcome aboard Airmail2 Cloud with new departures daily. Enjoy your flight with us.

Airmail2 Cloud Digital Mailroom Resources

SOURCE
1. 2024 Law Firm Office Attendance Policies Report, Thomson Reuters Institute https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en-us/posts/legal/law-firm-office-attendance-policies-report-2024/

14 12, 2022

Reinventing Professionals Podcast – Benefits of a Digital Mailroom

2023-09-22T11:05:53-07:00December 14th, 2022|Paper2Digital Blog, Presentations and Webinars|

Benefits of a Digital Mailroom

Reinventing Professionals Podcast by Ari Kaplan

Runtime 16-minutes. Click the play button to listen now.

Host, Ari Kaplan, is an attorney, author, and leading legal industry analyst. He has been sharing interviews with industry leaders shaping the next generation of legal and professional services since 2009.

This episode originally aired on Dec-2, 2022.

Featured Legal Technology Leaders

Steve Irons and Joseph Scott discuss how Airmail2 supports remote and hybrid workplace preferences, why the proper management of scanned material directly impacts a law firm’s security protocols, and the benefits of digital mailrooms. This interview is from the Reinventing Professionals podcast episode released on December 2, 2022 and hosted by Ari Kaplan.

Steve Irons

President

Joseph C. Scott, J.D.

Senior Director of Client Engagement

10 08, 2021

Law Offices Get Smaller, Records Rooms Get Digital: A DocSolid White Paper

2022-01-14T09:57:08-07:00August 10th, 2021|Paper2Digital Blog|

Law Offices Get Smaller, Records Rooms Get Digital: A DocSolid White Paper

Law firms are facing a tremendous opportunity to reduce real estate, but paper-based records rooms are an obstacle to this.  As firms strategize real estate compression plans, eliminating floor space required for records rooms and ad hoc paper file storage is key. Not only that, but the new hybrid workforce of in-house and at-home attorneys cannot be supported securely or efficiently when records room workflows are paper-based.

The DocSolid white paper, “Law Offices Get Smaller, Records Rooms Get Digital” outlines a digital records room strategy and implementation plan. A digital records room is a firm-wide system of software, workflow and services, to digitize paper records to the DMS (including iManage or NetDocuments), replacing paper file rooms.

Jamie Blomquist, CIO at Maslon, comments: “There are essentially three use cases for transitioning to a Digital Records Room: reduce costs by reducing the footprint of paper so we can optimize our office space for higher value work; improve productivity and help attorneys have anywhere access to their files; and lastly, driving our paper files into one centralized DMS file helps us govern and reduce risk better.”

 

The white paper includes insights from information governance and records professionals and details IG and security requirements for a best practice digital records room such as:

  1. Tight DMS / RMS integration with leading industry platforms such as iManage, NetDocuments and FileTrail
  2. Vendor DMS expertise and solution flexibility so that a firm’s DMS customizations can be accommodated
  3. In-house and outsourced staff empowered with DMS profiling-scanning capability without DMS logins
  4. Enterprise software that matches a firm’s security regime
  5. Avoidance of scan-to-email attachments or new operating repositories
  6. Built-in auditing of the overall capture process, down to the document level
  7. Paper document disposition-retention-shredding built into the process
  8. Ability to segregate processes for confidential content e.g., HR documents

For more information about the DocSolid white paper, “Law Firms Get Smaller, Records Rooms Get Digital” go here: https://www.docsolid.com/law-firm-digital-records-room-white-paper/

16 06, 2021

Why is DMS Integration so Pivotal for Digital Mail and Records?

2021-06-17T12:33:24-07:00June 16th, 2021|Paper2Digital Blog|

Why is DMS Integration so Pivotal for Digital Mail and Records?

A System of Record is Requisite to Information Governance and Managing Risk

In the beginning, document management was a system used to manage versions and eliminate the risk of sending the wrong version to clients. Documents could be more easily shared and re-used when stored in a managed library.

As the market matured, four things happened to change the economics and structure of the market for systems of record solutions and help move this market across the chasm.

  1. In the wake of a dramatic increase in compliance and risk-based concerns (Enron, SarBox, FRCP), organizations realized that they needed better control over their silos.
  2. SharePoint disrupted the market by entering at the low end.
  3. Users realized that they were spending too much on all of their silos.
  4. Users realized that they could only automate across departments if they did something about[1]

Fast forward to today and we see that the top five issues keeping Chief Legal Officers[2] awake at night, three pertain to how law firms handle of their records, including:

  1. Protection of corporate data
  2. Governance and management of data
  3. Ethics and compliance requirements

Why DMS is Necessary

Client information must be managed within the technology framework of the document management system (DMS).  Only through the technology of the DMS can we deliver security and the effective, timely, and consistent disposal of physical and electronic information that no longer needs to be retained should be a core component of any Information Governance program.

Email (for better or for worse often) is a corporate “record” just like any other document. Email is the de facto standard for business communication across organizations at this time. Just as any other type of business information and record, email must be included as part of, and adhered to, the organizational standards addressing information and records.

Therefore, scanning inbound postal mail via email is creating a new record that must be filed in the document management system.  This is an inefficient, laborious process that puts unnecessary labor on the part of the attorneys who must then file the email.

There are other options such as sending inbound postal mail via the DMS directly to the attorneys without using email.  This eliminates the inefficiency of sending via email and protects the firm’s information governance processes.

The Digital Mailroom enables productive, secure delivery of daily mail directly into the DMS. Learn more by downloading our free guide, 7 Reasons to Upgrade to a Digital Mailroom Operation

[1] https://info.aiim.org/aiim-blog/newaiimo/2010/10/20/systems-of-record-and-systems-of-engagement

[2] 2018 ACC Chief Legal Officer Survey

20 09, 2023

Does Your Firm’s Information Governance Policy Include the Mailroom?

2023-09-20T14:04:56-07:00September 20th, 2023|Paper2Digital Blog|

Does Your Information Governance Policy Include the Mailroom?

Should the mailroom be owned by the information governance arm of the firm? It has been a perfunctory function aligned with other physical office services, but now with fee earners and legal staff frequently working from home, it is mission critical. Mail workflows launch new work, and therefore often billable activity. This means matter centric record creation is starting right from mail delivery, not from a stack of mail sitting on a desk.

Since scanning and document description is involved, it is more technical as well. In short, no matter who this process belongs to organizationally, it needs to be a part of your well thought out information governance policy, and refined on an ongoing basis, just like any other records management.

Inbound mail contains time sensitive client information. The pandemic and work from home led to ad-hoc scanning that was envisioned to be a temporary fix. But if you are still delivering mail physically or re-delivering again after scanning portions of the mail, you are missing an opportunity to elevate this form of record keeping to align it with your information governance policies. Make it digital on arrival and digital only.

The mailroom is now the biggest source of where digital has not yet happened. What if you looked at it as that place where the creation of a fully functional and complete digital matter file (DMF) begins? Digitize all new paper immediately upon arrival.

Digitizing the mail, it will be delivered securely into a document repository (a.k.a. document management system) where it belongs right from the beginning. The document is profiled, put where it belongs, and OCR makes it immediately searchable.  It is actually pretty easy to elevate this process and get control.

Daily Mail Flowchart for a Digital Mailroom

Daily Mail Digital Delivery Flowchart

Five Tips for Improving Information Governance with a Digital Mailroom

  1. Establish the recipients, and which teams they belong to. You are already getting detail requests of “if you get this, send it there”, or “copy to my secretary/staff…” Formalize it!
  2. If you are not scanning directly to the DMS, you could be, and you should be. This allows images to be routed immediately to specific recipients or someone who can evaluate the importance and take action.
  3. Arm and educate your mailroom staff. Records staff are more valuable when they understand the distinctions among various transactions and their business purpose, right? Same here. Naming conventions are important. Basic examples of the types of mail that determine how mail is rough sorted upon intake, etc.
  4. Officially ‘add’ mail to your records policy and retentions. We know the filtered target documents already have a home here, but there are steps and process before that is determined. And 40% of mail can be “left on the cutting room floor” after it has been checked for anything of value. Let’s have an appropriate destruction bucket for that. There is productivity to be gained from not handling the physical paper any more than is necessary.
  5. If your firm is multi-office, you do have the option to centralize the mail operation – further capitalizing on the efficiencies of the Digital Mailroom. Think of the fully maximized efficiency and savings!

7 04, 2021

Reduce Real Estate by Digitizing Daily Mail and Records – The Right Way

2021-08-30T14:45:50-07:00April 7th, 2021|Paper2Digital Blog|

Reduce Real Estate by Digitizing Daily Mail and Records – The Right Way

 

The ways attorneys prefer to work has transformed. 76 percent now favor remote work, according to the 2021 Peer Monitor and Georgetown Law State of the Legal Industry Report. 

And if attorneys change the way they work, that means everything changes:  from how attorneys receive client mail and request matter files, to large scale financial decisions that affect one of the most expensive costs law firms have after salaries: real estate. 

This is why we shouldn’t be surprised when Sherry Cushman, Vice Chair and Executive Managing Director of Cushman & Wakefield, predicts “The legal sector will be downsizing its real estate needs on average 10% to 30% — and in some cases, 40% to 50%.”  

The opportunity to recapture real estate costs is extremely attractive to law firms, but firms first need to solve the paper-based problems of daily mail and onsite records.

Airmail2 Digital Mailroom Solution Icon
Airmail2 Digital Records Room Solution

Paper2Digital Transformation leads to real estate optimization

When it comes to daily mail, attorneys and staff working from home absolutely require reliable, digital delivery of daily mail. Scan-to-email workarounds were hastily applied at the onset of the COVID-19, but now the mailroom needs to be made into a durable, permanent and secure operation. 

Legal mail items contain client information, and the methods for processing them digitally should incorporate the same standards applied for all client data at the firm. In retrospect, building a daily mail delivery process based upon email was not a good idea.

A best practice Digital Mailroom operation delivers mail directly to the DMS where sensitive information can be delivered securely and governed according to firm policy. A best practice digital records room is similar, building a digitization project for scanning large volumes of paper records and storing them in the document management system. Built-in quality controls enable confident shredding of the scanned documents. It’s a Paper2Digital Transformation that can make entire file rooms disappear.

These are best practices focused on the critical paper-based workflows inside the law firm. The value proposition is strong just based on eliminating the costs and inefficiencies of paper records and nothing more. However, a multitude of other high value, and high visibility, goals become possible including; repurposed office space, hoteling, and downsizing. Beyond the tangible cost savings, these digital workflows are required to keep attorneys and staff productive, no matter where they may choose to work on any given day.

DocSolid’s Airmail2 Digital Mail + Records Suite transforms a firm’s paper-based mailroom and Records Room functions into streamlined, digital operations supporting both work-from-home and return-to-office strategies simultaneously, while enabling firms to optimize their real estate.

The Airmail2 Suite provides scanned delivery of sensitive and time-dependent mail and file requests via the document management system (DMS), enabling firms to govern, secure, and distribute information efficiently, according to policy and in keeping with individual client guidelines. 

 

More can be learned about the benefits of transforming mailroom operations in our industry white paper:
7 Reasons to Upgrade to a Digital Mailroom Operation .

 

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