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I think what he should do it just the setting up part. They can then manage it themselves and you can provide support to them.Recently spent a couple of weeks in hospital and really impressed with how the NHS now did with paperwork as they have always been one the biggest paper shufflers in the UK.
Not any more X ray. Mi scans - blood tests etc go straignt on to computer. A junior doctor was on duty from 8 am to 8 pm mainly entering info from ward rounds like medication - progress etc straight onto computer.
In short they do everything in house and efficiently. No need for outsourcing.
BTW. there is also a problem with targeting solicitors and accountants. Well two actually. One is called the data protection act. They can't just outsource to anyone. 2) If a solicitor of accountant spends time on paperwork they can charge extra fees for it and at up to £300-£400 an hr here is no incentive to outsource to a doc scanning service.
Companies would only use you to switch over to paperless if they haven't done so already.OP I gave you several reasons why this was a no brainer. Let me give you another. TIMING is an important element in any busines venture and you are 20 years too late.
Way back then there were few computers and even fewer scanners around at that time and the latter were hand held jobs which scanned about 4inch. So a serivice like you contemplate may have been viable.
Todayhowever computers are dirt cheap. Multifunction printers are under £40 quid and we don't even need to use them in everyday business. Most of us save a copy to file then print. Why an earth would be need to outsouce scanning.
Don't just take my word for it however. We have a lot of solicistors and accountants in this forum. Why not ask them if there would be a demand for such a service.
R
OP I gave you several reasons why this was a no brainer. Let me give you another. TIMING is an important element in any busines venture and you are 20 years too late.
Way back then there were few computers and even fewer scanners around at that time and the latter were hand held jobs which scanned about 4inch. So a serivice like you contemplate may have been viable.
Todayhowever computers are dirt cheap. Multifunction printers are under £40 quid and we don't even need to use them in everyday business. Most of us save a copy to file then print. Why an earth would be need to outsouce scanning.
Don't just take my word for it however. We have a lot of solicistors and accountants in this forum. Why not ask them if there would be a demand for such a service.
R
There you go again Sanji with your uneducated uniformed appreciation of a situation.
We are mot taliking about a papered for a paerless office. That will never happen unless laws are changed. What we are talking about is a need to outsource to a 'scanning service' .I can't see any.
As for big companies as indicated by Tony. Come on ow. He obviously is too young to remember fiche machines. Those paperless records go back to pre World War 11 and most of our banks and larger businesses have them.
Please don't post opinions when you are only guessiing then. As i suggested all the OP has to do is canvas and few members who are solicitors or accontants.
It is not uneducated. My dad is going paperless. He has pretty much got his staff finishing scanning everything in and is putting everything into storage as he has to keep paper work for a certain length of time. This sort of service would have been useful for him, however it did provide me with something to do over the summer. I never said anything about throwing away the hard paper. You can see in my first post that I said he should also provide storage. Maybe you should learn to read the thread first.There you go again Sanji with your uneducated uniformed appreciation of a situation.
We are mot taliking about a papered for a paerless office. That will never happen unless laws are changed. What we are talking about is a need to outsource to a 'scanning service' .I can't see any.
As for big companies as indicated by Tony. Come on ow. He obviously is too young to remember fiche machines. Those paperless records go back to pre World War 11 and most of our banks and larger businesses have them.
Please don't post opinions when you are only guessiing then. As i suggested all the OP has to do is canvas and few members who are solicitors or accontants.
I think usually with new IT systems, both methods are used side by side so the files would be on the computer and in the filing cabinet if needed until it can be fully relied upon and all staff are used to it. Thats the way my dad is doing it.Ok, Here's an opinion from an accountant who already uses a less paper (rather than paperless office) set up.
There seem to be three big barriers to accountants adopting paperless technology:
1) Heavy investment in IT, both document management software and hardware such as scanners and dual screens
2) What to do with the already bulging filing cabinets
3) The retraining of staff to do things differently and the knowledge that you've got the new system right
As with all businesses, we are generally busy doing the day to day running and have little time to start thinking about new working practices, however much of a time saving they may be in the long run, the current systems may just not be broken enough to change them and Mrs Higgins still needs her tax return completing before Friday!
My view would be that if you can crack numbers 2&3 for people you'd perhaps be on a winner, but there'd be little repeat revenue.
What I would NOT do, is outsource the scanning of my daily documents going forward, because I'll have already dealt with that through my internal processes. I also think you'd be on a loser if scanning in India, simply because of data protection laws.