Digital White Papers

IG19

publication of the International Legal Technology Association

Issue link: https://epubs.iltanet.org/i/1188906

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 25 of 71

I L T A W H I T E P A P E R | I N F O R M A T I O N G O V E R N E N C E 26 L ong before information governance became a discipline, organizations needed to address the challenge of finding and locating information. Saving information in the right place is only one part of the equation. Many information initiatives and system deployments do not succeed or gain adequate user adoption because there is a perception that an inability to find and locate important information in a timely fashion is a failure – due to technological flaws or inadequate system design. While these aspects are important, the quick and efficient findability of information often lies in how the files themselves are named. Information is created and received in various forms across every aspect of the organization. As legal, regulatory and client mandates increase, information classification has become more and more important. A failure to properly safeguard your information can have catastrophic consequences, including fines, sanctions, loss of clients/revenue and reputational damage. Unfortunately, a historical challenge in implementing naming convention standards has been end user acceptance. Users often rebel against the concept of guidelines as to how to name "their" documents. However, the documents belong to the firm and having mutually agreed-upon naming conventions for information enables all users to find documents more quickly, and meet the compliance mandates the firm must follow. The tide has shifted, and much like other security restrictions that must Proper Naming and Classification of Files B Y L E I G H I S A A C S

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Digital White Papers - IG19