Common Issues and Solutions
Does your organization lack any policy (or otherwise) driven rules about maintaining your templates?
Are you or your colleagues squirrelling away versions of templates on your desktop or personal folders for use without checking to see if they have been updated or are indeed still in use?Have you ever sent out the wrong version of a template and had to write that embarrassing email to your client or colleague attaching the right version?
Are your organization’s templates found in various internal folders, intranets and/or team SharePoint sites, making them hard to find?
Are you or your colleagues using various versions of the same template as a starting point for negotiations?
If you answered yes to even one of the above, please read on!
The challenges of contractual risk are faced by many functions, not just legal. Marketing, Finance, IT, HR, and Knowledge Management (the list goes on) all typically refer to standard sets of templates used for internal and external purposes.
These templates, more often than not from my experience, are found in varying locations (including personal desktops!), are out of date and have no formal guidelines around the method and timings for reviews – i.e. what should be reviewed, how often and by whom. The consequences of the failure to properly store, manage and update templates are not just about the embarrassment of having to email out the correct template version - they can be considerably more dire. Out-of-date terms may lead to litigation, fines by regulatory agencies, loss of business and/or serious reputational damage. As such, it is vital that organizations implement proper guidelines and control frameworks around the management of their templates.
Regardless of whether your organization has 250,000 employees or 250 employees, there are a plethora of things to consider before implementing any new policy and control framework designed to meet said policy requirements. To help get you started (and based on the considerable experience I’ve had with implementing template control frameworks within a large-scale organization), here is a breakdown of what I think are some of the key questions to start asking (sooner rather than later!) – broken down into 3 phases.
As you can see, there is a lot to consider, and this is where Kim Document can help. Kim Document is designed to, amongst other things, facilitate robust management of your templates. Kim helps drive consistency of templates used, provides for easy audit trails, helps manage governance and increases your organization's day-to-day workflow visibility.
Kim turns the daunting task of managing templates into a pleasurable, organized and rewarding experience. Your teams can turn your templates into easily configurable web form applications, share them easily via our campaign feature or published linked functionality and ultimately manage them in one central system (the ‘golden source’ if you will!). No coding is needed.
Furthermore, you can be up and running in 10 minutes by using our ready-made template solutions available to you at no extra cost. If you are ready to take control of your organization’s templates and are interested in seeing how Kim Document can help, book a demo today.