that is the question
On 1/17/07, Steve Petersen <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Am I off-base in making this part of the flowchart process or what have
> others used in explaining the why to non RIM personnel.
steve
like others have mentioned you need to document the entire process.
There is no one point in the lifecycle that determines when a document
becomes a record. I believe that in any process you will have multiple
records declaration points when decisions are made that make an item a
record. The simple receipt of a document can result in that item
becoming a record, e.g. a FOIA request.
I will point once again to the use of Graham Charting as an excellent
tool to capture the detailed lifecycle of a business process. The
standard IT business process tools aren't as robust or detailed enough
to completely chart a process.
for example years ago I read a story wherein Dr. Graham documented a
particular permitting process for a city. Here is the link to the
story. note that this particular process had over 400 steps in it and
the chart was 30 ft long
http://www.enquirer.com/editions/2002/10/30/loc_development30.html
this link will take you to a pdf file with further information about
process mapping
www.worksimp.com/project%20results.pdf
so to put it simply, chart the entire process capturing everything
that happens in the process
--
Peter Kurilecz CRM CA
Richmond, Va
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