Friday, September 08, 2006

Paper Versus Electronic Documents

Like everyone else, I have been, over the past 10 years, faced with the choice between using paper and using electronic documents. Caroline Jarrett's article below focuses on forms, but other documents pose the same choice. Because I travel a lot with my laptop, and hooking up to a printer is a dicey proposition on the road, I have trained myself to rely on electronic documents and avoid paper as much as possible. Here are some of the issues I've found:

  • Vision. I'm a very visually-orientated person. If I don't see it, I don't understand it. Electronic documents are harder to see all at once than printed ones, which you can spread out on a desk and skim over easily. The technologies for scrolling, including connection and graphics speed and screen resolution, have all gotten better in the last few years. Even the size of laptop screens are much larger, making the visual scanning of documents easier.

    Changing from paper to electronic documents is mainly, I think, a matter of habit. I have simply committed to the electronic format. The more I refuse to revert to paper and practice viewing electronic forms, the better I "see" them.

  • Re-use of Information. The biggest benefit of electronic documents, in my opinion, is that it's easy to copy and paste information from one electronic document to another. This is much faster than printing and underlining a paper document, then copying sections of the paper document onto more paper or into a computer. Reusing information is more and more important to productivity.

  • Printing Time. Printers are a lot faster now than 10 years ago, but they are still slow. It takes time to print stuff. Sure, you can multi-task while a document prints, but you often have to stop that to load more paper, or correct jams and misalignments.

  • Ease of Dissemination/Collaboration. It's hard to email a printed document! Yes, you can fax it, but you still end up with a low-res printed document that has to be re-keyed into a computer. Electronic documents can be emailed, and often, edited online using things like Word's Track Changes feature that allows multiple reviewers to add comments and changes to documents. Wiki technology is the ultimate expression of this collaborative trend.

  • But I Want My Printed Copy; I Don't feel Safe Without It. Ever heard of redundant back-ups and off-site archiving? I always make at least two backup copies of any document I create. These are stored locally--usually one backup on my hard drive, one on an external hard drive. So, I have the original and two copies locally. What if I have a fire? That's why I also keep an extra copy of important files offsite. I use a service called WebFiles by www.ProjectStory.com . It makes uploading important files simple to do. There are many other similar services. Remember, almost anything you say about electronic documents applies to paper too--you can lose paper; it can burn up. David Orr

Caroline's Corner - Why People persist with using Paper FormsSource: UN, 7 September 2006 by Caroline Jarrett

Have you ever wondered why your shiny new online form isn't getting the use it deserves, and the boring old paper still keeps poring in? This month, I've been mostly thinking about tax forms - and tax forms on paper. It's something that I do from time to time. Now, I do truly understand that not everyone likes thinking about tax forms, paper or otherwise - and in the UK, most people have their tax dealt with by their employers and don't have much to do with tax forms. But this is an international column and I've been having an international month. And there are some insights here that I think may apply to forms in general.


I have been doing a bit of digging into the statistics. In the USA, pretty much everyone has to do a tax return and by 28th April 2006, the IRS had received about 38M of them from people who don't use a paid preparer - only 21M electronically. That's about 55%. In Australia, pretty much everyone has to do a tax return and the most recent statistics I could find said that about 2.9M Australians do their own tax, about 1M electronically. That's about 34%. In both countries, electronic filing has been around for quite a while, isn't excessively difficult, and has the advantage for most people that they get a quicker refund. And it led me to wondering: why do people persist with paper forms? More......
http://www.usabilitynews.com/news/article3385.asp

1 Comments:

At 10:01 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I suppose they are 2 aspects to the issue:
(1) educating the public going electronic means going green and many trees would be saved
(2) the process of filling up the tax form electronically should be streamlined and simplified for data that could be provided electronically through other systems.

 

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