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With compliance and litigation concerns raising the profile for records management, records professionals have a prime opportunity to help evaluate and align business processes to meet organizational goals.
Over the past two decades, there has been an increasing focus on the concept of strategic alignment. It has arisen from two viewpoints: focus on the customer and the need to unify disparate technology. The focus on the customer has been, beyond a doubt, the primary driver for the implementation of the strategic alignment focus in organizations. Customers, whether internal or external, are seen as the reason for the existence of the organization. Satisfying the needs of customers helps to define the structure, processes, products, and values that an organization needs to create and foster to be successful.
No less important in the age of computerization is the ability to structure technological resources so they support this customer-based focus. This is not merely an effort to streamline software applications or to implement enterprise resource planning. Rather, it is both the leveraging of existing resources and the judicious planning for future technologies aimed at achieving the goals that are derived from customer-centered objectives.
For the most part, records and information management (RIM) has been an innocent bystander of this ongoing movement. Only accidentally has records management been a part of the strategic alignment effort. But that is no longer an acceptable situation. With the increasing recognition of the importance of good RIM - especially driven by the effects of poor regulatory compliance and litigation - records managers have an excellent opportunity to become active participants in the organi-, zation's strategic alignment efforts.
Strategic Alignment Defined
So, what is strategic alignment? Simply, strategic alignment is the link between an organization's overall goals and the goals of each of the units that contribute to the success of those overall goals. At the core, it means that records managers must look at both the short-term and long-term objectives of the records management program in the context of the organization's customer-centric focus. This should be a dynamic process with a quarterly or annual review of the goals of the records management program in the context of the changing strategy of the organization.
Understand the Strategy
To ensure that the records...