Business-at-the-speed-of-paper will soon be ‘unacceptable’

Almost half of businesses say that the biggest single productivity improvement would be to remove paper, yet paper consumption still increasing for one in five organisations

Silver Spring, Md., November 06, 2014 – More than one in five (21%) organisations are increasing their paper consumption, according to new research by independent information management analysts, AIIM. This is despite around half of businesses surveyed claiming that the biggest single productivity improvement would be to remove paper.

68% of respondents in the new study, ‘Paper Wars 2014 – an update from the battlefield’, said that business-at-the-speed-of-paper will be ‘unacceptable in just a few years’ time’, as the rising expectation amongst customers and employees is for a much more rapid response. However, only one in five has a board-level endorsed policy to actually reduce paper.

“Reducing paper-use has a tangible impact on business, from improved customer service to increased productivity,” said AIIM president, John Mancini. “Business-at-the-speed-of-paper simply isn’t compatible with the modern digital enterprise and while we can’t eliminate paper altogether, we can all be much smarter about using less.”

For those organisations that have already committed to reducing paper, 60% of respondents have seen ROI on their paper-free projects within 12 months, and more than three-quarters had done so within 18 months. The biggest benefits from going paper-free were being able to give a faster response to customers and increased productivity.

Paper Wars 2014 – an update from the battlefield’ was launched today (6 November 2014) as part of World Paper Free Day 2014, an AIIM initiative that aims to show how much paper is wasted and how well we can manage without it.

Hundreds of the world’s biggest organisations have shown their support, including IBM, Accenture, London Underground, Citigroup, US Department of Defense and HP. With around 300 million tonnes of paper produced each year, resulting in almost four billion trees cut down annually, World Paper Free Day encourages businesses and consumers to pledge to go paper-free for one day. For each registration AIIM is making a donation to The Arbor Day Foundation, a charity that encourages the planting of trees.

Over half of respondents admitted printing personal paper copies to take to a meeting, or to add a signature. They also use printed copies for reading offline or out-of-the-office (50%), and particularly to review and mark-up (45%).

Many respondents feel a lack of management initiatives (47%) and the (perceived) need for physical signatures (44%) were the main reasons why there is still so much paper in their business processes. There was also felt to be a general lack of understanding of paper-free options. Legal and finance departments were considered to be the most resistant to the introduction of paper-free working, followed by HR and general administration.

“Millions of unnecessary sheets of paper are printed every single day and businesses of all sizes are seeing the office cluttered and their processes slowed,” concluded John Mancini. “The fact of the matter is we need to use less paper. The paperless office will probably never arrive but achieving paper-free processes is a realistic goal for any business and there are many ways to capture, manage and store information digitally.”

Other key findings in the AIIM report include:

• On average, 35% of scanned documents are 100% born digital i.e., unchanged from printer to scanner. 16% of scanned documents are photocopied before scanning, and 65% are not destroyed after scanning.
• On average, 44% of invoices arrive as electronic (PDF, Fax, EDI). 59% of these will still end up as a paper copy, mostly printed prior to manual processing (39%). 13% print a copy and then scan it back in. Only 8% pass it directly to the capture system.
• 44% of organisations are only 10% towards their goal of paper-free processes. 23% have yet to achieve any, including 22% of the very largest organisations.
• Two thirds of respondents recognise the importance of mobile devices for content access and data capture. 25% are keen to exploit mobile and 9% see it as a “required option for all processes”.

The research for ‘Paper Wars 2014 – an update from the battlefield’ was underwritten in part by EMC Corp., Esker Inc., IBML, I.R.I.S. Inc., Iron Mountain, Kofax, Opex Corp., Swiss Post Solutions and Spigraph Group. The full report is free to download http://www.aiim.org/Research/Industry-Watch/Paper-Wars-2014

The survey was taken using a web-based tool by 444 individual members of the AIIM community between Sept 12, and Oct 07, 2014.

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