Software Articles
1: Enterprise Resource Planning and Enterprise Content Management
The word Enterprise Resource Planning or ERP conveys a sense of planning the use of enterprise-wide resources to achieve enterprise objectives in the best possible manner. However, ERP has come to mean something much less ambitious. It simply means integrating two or more separate applications.
2: Enterprise Content Management Systems Cross Departmental and Functional Boundaries
What is content? What does content management involve? And what is special about enterprise content management? This introductory article will seek to answer these questions.
3: Enterprise Content Management and Service Oriented Architecture
Visualize the following scenario: All enterprise content (wherever generated by whatever entity) goes into a single repository and users can receive different services (that they were receiving from different applications earlier, or are completely new services) from an integrated system with a standard front end.
4: Managing with Enterprise Content Management
Enterprise Content Management involves capturing structured and unstructured content that’s generated all over the enterprise, storing that content, processing it into information, delivering that information to those who need it for decision-support, and finally transferring it to long-term storage for preservation until it can be removed safely from the system.
5: Enterprise Content Management and Information Presentation
Content is useless unless it’s used for managing the business. Managers must get relevant information presented in ways that bring out its significance. Only then can they make informed business decisions, instead of decisions based on a "hunch".
6: How Do Enterprise Content Management Systems Capture Content?
Along with Content Storage, Preservation, and Delivery, Capture is one of the key components of Enterprise Content Management. This article will explore the ways content is captured in ECM systems.
7: How Enterprise Content Management Systems Store and Preserve Content
The term "storage" means temporary storage while the term "preservation" means long-term storage. Both may use the same kinds of media to store the content, though long-term storage often uses read-only media.
8: Workflow and Enterprise Content Management
A workflow is a sequence of activities that achieve some defined purpose. The purpose can be transforming raw materials into a finished product, or provision of some kind of service, or just processing data into meaningful information. The purpose is achieved through a systematic organization of resources, roles and information flows.
9: Web Content Management: An Integral Part of Enterprise Content Management
Corporate web portals serve as a single interface to work with varied content and different applications. Both employees and outside entities like suppliers, customers, and the government can use the corporate portal to get information, contribute to content, and communicate with the company.
10: Enterprise Content Management Seeks to Manage Information
Enterprise Content Management Seeks to Manage Information, Not Just Generating, Processing, and Distributing It
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