The Datamax Thinking Blog

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OCR and Small Businesses

Optical Character Recognition (OCR) has made great progress in the fight for paperless offices. It’s become a staple component in just about any document management software.

So what is OCR? Wikipedia offers this definition: “…the mechanical or electronic translation of images of handwritten, typewritten or printed text (usually captured by a scanner) into machine-editable text.” (2008)

Fundamentally, a computer reads the document and creates a library of searchable information. This type of application allows an EDM solution the opportunity to build a database of text, making the search for usable information within and across documents much easier.

While many argue the accuracy levels for OCR engines can reach 98 or 99 percent, small-to-medium businesses (SMBs) may find this hard to achieve with most commercially-available software. Many variables can affect the accuracy levels of output, ranging from document condition to readability.

Where problems can begin to occur is when OCR is not applied to the text contained within the scanned document, but used to lift index values themselves (e.g. customer name, number, etc.). This becomes dangerous if there are no quality assurances or stop-loss measures in place. If that is the case, it becomes likely a document will be misplaced due to a character being off here or there.

Here are five things SMBs should think about before implementing OCR into their business processes:

· How will OCR be implemented into your workflow? Be smart about where OCR will benefit your organization and where you can rely on process or other EDM solutions instead.

· Achieve accuracy with continued document preparation. Most people turn to OCR to save on document preparation time, but isn’t saving 30 minutes in your workflow worth sacrificing an extra 5 minutes in document preparation?

· Make sure everyone is on the same page. OCR can greatly increase the automation of your processes when everyone from the executives to the administrative personnel agrees on how to find your documents.

· Do you have the capabilities to successfully integrate OCR? OCR applications can stretch out longer than most people expect simply because they don’t have enough computing horsepower or don’t have realistic expectations about what their budget will allow.

· Who’s in charge? In high demand environments, having someone who can identify workflow bottlenecks, potential training issues, interdepartmental miscommunication, and business process misalignments is critical.