Bip 0025-1-2002
Bip 0025-1-2002
Bip 0025-1-2002
Pa rt 1 : A m a n a g em en t g u i d e to th e va l u e of BS I SO 1 5 489 -1
Effecti ve records man agemen t —
Part 1 : A man agemen t gu i de to
th e val u e of BS I SO 1 5489-1
Davi d Best
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Foreword iii
1 I n trod u cti on 1
3 Record s m an ag em en t an d kn owl ed g e m an ag em en t 9
6 Con cl u si on 25
Abou t th e au th or 29
Fi g u re 1 . Th e record s m an ag em en t l i fe cycl e 3
i
Foreword
All b usinesses , whether p rivate or p ub lic s ector, rely on information and records to conduct their
affairs in a systematic and legally comp liant way. The strategic management of records and
information is essential to this p roces s and never more so than in an age of e- commerce and
e- government. With a rap idly changing and develop ing b usiness context there are considerab le
organizational b enefits to adop ting a consistent and standardized ap p roach to the management
In O ctob er 2 001 the first international standard for the management of records, was launched in
Montreal, C anada. The two- p art p ub lication of S tandard and Technical Rep ort, imp lemented in
the United Kingdom as BS IS O 1 5 489- 1 : 2 001 and PD IS O /TR 1 5 489- 2 : 2 001 were the culmination
of three years’ work b y a group of international exp erts to synthesize b est p ractice from around
the world in the strategic management of records. This S tandard and Technical Rep ort are
ap p licab le to multinational comp anies and small enterp rises alike and p rovide an es sential tool
The S tandard p rovides a framework within which the necessary management of records and
information can take p lace. This p ub lication is the first in a s eries of p ub lications on records
management sup p orted b y BS I and is intended to comp lement the S tandard and Technical
Rep ort and help p lace them in context for the us er. The p ub lications exp and on the framework
that the S tandard creates and p rovide b oth interp retation and illustration of good p ractice. E ach
volume has b een written p redominantly from the United Kingdom p ers p ective b y leading United
Kingdom p ractitioners, who have firs t hand, p ractical exp erience of, and insight into, the iss ues
I can wholeheartedly recommend this informative s eries to the reader, which p rovides insight
into the ap p lication of b oth BS IS O 1 5 489 - 1 : 2 001 and PD IS O /TR 1 5 489- 2 : 2 001 .
— BIP 002 5 - 3 : 2 003 , Effective records management — Part 3: Performance management for
BS ISO 1 5489-1 .
Philip A Jones
C hairman ID T/2 /1 7
iii
iv
1 Introduction
1 .1 Th e sta n d a rd
BS ISO 1 5489- 1 is the first standard on records management and has its roots in the
first ever Australian national standard on records management, AS 4390-1 /6. It is
accompanied by a Technical Report, PD ISO/TR 1 5489- 2, which provides further details
and explanation together with a methodology for implementing the standard. Both
publications are implementations of ISO documents. PD ISO/TR 1 5489- 2 is an
implementation guide for records management professionals (and others) who have
been assigned responsibility for managing their organization’s records.
1 .2 Wh a t d oe s re cord s m a n a g e m e n t h a ve to d o wi th m e ?
There are many well publicized events and subj ects where records management has
had a significant role in either the discovery of problems and/or the recovery from those
events in the last few years, in banking, industry, commerce and the media.
In each of these cases, the presence (or in some cases absence) of good records
management had a material impact on the outcome. There are many more that are not
in the public domain. In some cases these records were physical, in some cases digital,
but in each case they had a significant effect on the way in which events unfolded.
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A m an ag em en t g u i d e to th e val u e of BS I SO 1 5489-1
1 .3 Wh at d oes th i s g u i d e cover?
In each section, where possible, case studies have been used to inform or illuminate the text.
• Proper recording of the transactions of the organization is essential, not j ust in the
areas of finance and production but also in all the organization’s activities. This
remains true independent of sectors, though some sector differences are highlighted,
for example between regulated and unregulated and public and private sector
businesses.
• Records provide the raw material for the exploitation of information about:
– intellectual property;
– the customer;
- procurement;
- production;
- logistics;
- administration.
• The payback on the implementation cost can be rapid, but the strategy for achieving
such results should be set out in advance and should be clear and agreed by all
senior management interests.
• The benefits (which are also described in BS ISO 1 5489- 1 ) from the point of view of
a practising senior manager are as follows.
– the corporate knowledge base is more accessible and less incomplete with an
effective records management system in place;
– business continuity and the training and development of key staff is less complex
because of the availability of information in an accessible and standard form.
Figure 1 describes the life cycle of all information in the organization whether in paper
or in electronic form. Usually when problems arise in the processes or accountability of
the business, it is found that some part of this cycle has not been properly attended to.
Either the records policies on how to create a record, or the indexing and retrieval
issues have not been addressed.
2
Introduction
Final disposal
Active use of
Retention the record
Retrieval
Storage
This leads to cas es where decis ions cannot b e recalled b ecause the documents are
incomp lete, or a series of events cannot b e recons tructed b ecause the integrity of the
These events occur whether the record is held in p aper form or on electronic media. They
are p rob lematic b ecause of the increas ed sp an of control in modern flat organizations ,
and b ecaus e the increas ed demands for transp arency and accountab ility in corp orate
and p ub lic affairs have not b een consis tently reflected in the ways that organiz ations
and managements deal with the cycle, p ictured s o decep tively s imp ly ab ove.
BS IS O 1 5 489- 1 recognizes and addres ses the is sues inherent in managing each s tage
of this cycle in an ap p rop riate way and in a way designed to p romote excellence and
3
2 Ben efi ts of a stan dards-dri ven
approach to records management
2. 1 I n trod u cti on
The maj or question for any senior manager of an organization confronted with the
challenge to imp lement BS IS O 1 5 489- 1 is ‘Why s hould we do this and what is the
b enefit to my organization?’
If the ans wer to this ques tion is amb iguous or unclear, the determination and effort
b ehind any imp lementation is likely to b e less , and in s ome cas es the imp lementation
may fail.
2. 2 B e n e fi ts of sta n d a rd s i n g e n e ra l
2. 2. 1 Co m m on a p pro a ch
The exis tence of a s tandard means that staff trained in its ap p lication and us e have
only to b e trained once and kep t up to date. The skills they learn are therefore
of the organizational setting in which it is p ractis ed. The down side to this of cours e is
that although a s tandard will ens ure that s omething is done in the right way it will of
its elf not ensure that the right thing is b eing done! This requires management
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A m an ag em en t g u i d e to th e val u e of BS I SO 1 5489-1
2. 2. 2 Con si sten cy
The presence of a standard in driving the way certain activities or processes are carried
out ensures that there is consistency at least at the level of ‘what’ should be done. Of
course it is never possible to use a standard to ensure that the ‘how’ of things is always
done in the same way but at least the overarching presence of a standard ensures that
the touchstone of good practice is always there. In this regard there is a book, BIP 0025-2,
which gives excellent information on the implementation of BS ISO 1 5489-1 .
2. 2. 3 Best practi ce
We are also seeing a convergence in the traditional skills of the archivist, the records
manager, the information manager and the knowledge officer. From the role of the
archivist, who has conventionally managed records at the end of their active usage
when they are entering the retention and disposal stages of the records management
life cycle (see Figure 1 ), to that of the records and knowledge officers, who have usually
been involved in the active period of the life cycle, there is a growing awareness,
fostered by initiatives like the development of BS ISO 1 5489- 1 , that all have a vital
role to play in the ‘information health’ of the organization. See for example C Holtham,
Towards the new information professional in The Fourth Resource — Information and
its management [2] .
As a consequence there is a growing body of skilled people and an improving career
path for those who wish to spend their careers in this area.
6
Ben efi ts of a stan d ard s-d ri ven approach to record s m an ag em en t
Paradoxically, the implementation of BS ISO 1 5489-1 will on the whole reduce the
volume of records kept by organizations applying it. The reasons for this are that its
application requires that organizations develop retention policies for each type or class
of records as part of the overall set of records policies. When you turn your attention to
these policies, you will find that the most extraordinary level of storage of information
may be ingrained in the business. For example, during an investigation of the rapid
escalation of disk storage requirements in a blue chip environment, the most
extraordinary duplication of storage of records by a number of departments and
individuals was discovered. No one knew whose responsibility it was to act as custodian
of various sets of documents. The resulting storage in the separate corporate directories
on the various shared disk drives was a bonanza for the IT supplier and a constant
headache for the IT manager. When the records manager (formerly limited in their role
to looking after paper records) was allowed to develop and apply some sensible policies
on storage and retention, the problem vanished within three months.
It is impossible to put a figure on the general level of benefit from applying a standards
based approach to records management. However, in the maj ority of cases the benefits
are well in excess of the cost of implementation, and frequently it has been true that
some business purpose or activity emerges as possible which was not previously
feasible at an economic cost before.
7
3 Records management and
knowledge management
Whereas five years ago the concep t of knowledge management was much s p oken ab out
b ut rarely p ractis ed, now mos t organiz ations p ay at least lip s ervice to the idea of
managing the knowledge which has b uilt up over many years in the form of records,
datab ases , customer files and the like. Indeed one of the maj or p rob lems confronting
many cus tomer and/or s up p lier facing ap p lications is that of ens uring that the content
BS IS O 1 5 489- 1 recognizes the vital role that records p lay in the management of
knowledge in the organization. What might a few years ago have b een recognized as a
• Records are rep os itories of the organization’s accumulated knowledge ab out itself,
• Prop erly managed, records can b e mined as a rich vein of information, which can
• O ver time, records collections or s eries come to contain mass es of information ab out
trends through time, whether around p rocess es , trans actions or p eop le. They
therefore p rovide management with p redictive p os sib ilities for extrap olation which
were not p reviously p oss ib le or were p reviously too exp ens ive.
This section des crib es the relations hip b etween the imp lementation of good p ractice in
b usines s es.
From the p revious section it s hould b e ob vious that good records p ractice is extremely
imp ortant, and this means an imp lementation of BS IS O 1 5 489- 1 at a level ap p rop riate
O ne of the p rincip al reas ons for this b elief is that records are the raw material of
knowledge in mos t b us ines ses . Whether we are discus sing cus tomer corresp ondence,
s up p lier invoices , technical engineering files, client p ap ers or any other form of record,
this information lies at the heart of any p lan to es tab lish effective knowledge
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A m an ag em en t g u i d e to th e val u e of BS I SO 1 5489-1
Su ppl i er i n voi ces Kn owl ed g e u sefu l for n eg oti ati n g bu l k ag reemen ts,
Tech n i cal en g i n eeri n g fi l es Research an d d evel opm en t re-u ses; paten t si fti n g ;
Tab le 1 makes it clear that although having good records management does not ensure
any form of knowledge management cap ab ility, the ab sence of good corp orate standards
• access routes to this information, which may take the form of indexes, lists of
documents or numb ered volumes or edge marked s helves or, of cours e, numerous
comp uter ap p lications , acces sing a corp orate dep artmental or b usines s unit data
It is fairly clear that a records s ys tem p rop erly imp lemented fulfils these requirements .
A case study will make this p oint clear. S ome years ago a video p roduction comp any,
long s ince defunct, had b ought a news reel archive, a lib rary of film sp anning the
p eriod from the late 1 9th century to the middle of the 2 0th century.
These short films were p roduced as the earlies t vers ion of what are now the news
channels. Two extensive, hand- written indexes us ed to access the archives were p art of
the collection. Thes e indexes allowed the owners to p roduce all s orts of knowledge
When rights to the archive were let to a Jap anes e organiz ation they asked to b e
p rovided with a C D RO M b ased vers ion of the index as a condition of p aying the as king
p rice. The p oint is , though, that without thos e original records of the contents , the
value of the archive would have b een very much reduced. The transition from
10
Records management and knowledge management
The role of records management in this setting (i. e. knowledge management) therefore
is to:
• identify the knowledge requirements of the organization and to what extent those
can be met from information contained in the records;
– logged;
– indexed;
– maintained;
– accessed as needed;
The purpose of the indexing system within an overall records framework is that the
index should allow the records themselves or appropriate information about the records
to be accessed by whoever has need of them for a legitimate purpose.
A further example of this type of value in the record, rather than in the item itself can
be seen from the automation of the indexes of the National Sound Archive at the
British Library. These records were also handwritten or typed over many years and
described the wealth of the collections from regional accents of the British Isles to
original recordings of the great artists and actors of the 1 9th and 20th centuries. The
automation of these has allowed the indexes to be put onto the world wide web, so that
much of the information they contain and ultimately the recordings themselves will be
able to be accessed, regardless of the location of the listener.
11
4 The role of records management
in corporate governance
The following text is taken from the D eloitte and Touche p ub lication, Corp orate
Gov ernance , Winter 2 000 /01 Progres s Rep ort. It highlights s ome of the p rob lems of a
Dam aging p ub licity w hen things go w rong. Financial p enalties lev ied b y the
Financial Serv ices Authority. Pub lic statem ents of m isconduct issued. Crim inal
Com m ittee ov erloaded. All of this could hap p en in the near future to good
directors and it is against a b ackdrop of p ressure for tougher action against those
b lam ed w hen things go w rong. There is m uch to w orry ab out if you are not in
• there is increasing p ressure to take short cuts giv en m arket exp ectations;
• the new Financial Serv ices Authority is keen to m ake its m ark;
• there are cost issues around increased regulation for b oth large and sm all
b usinesses;
Clearly there is a need to avoid falling foul of the tough new req uirem ents.
Therefore directors need to estab lish m echanism s for effective risk m anagem ent,
not just for Turnb ull com p liance reasons, b ut also to keep the grow ing challenges
w hich they face at b ay. As regulation increases, the b est directors are freq uently
1
the ones w ho w ill b e first to q uestion w hether they still w ant to b e directors.
1
Rep roduced b y kind p ermis s ion of D eloitte and Touche.
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A m an ag em en t g u i d e to th e val u e of BS I SO 1 5489-1
This p ub lication is not ab out C orp orate Governance, b ut it is imp ortant to realize how
records management has a b earing on the ab ility of management to fulfil its ob ligations
The following factors influence the ap p licab ility of records management to corp orate
• scale of organization;
• nature of b us ines s.
It may s eem ob vious that large organizations are more comp lex than s mall. But this is
not always true. C onsider the cas e of a medical charity, with income of ab out £ 5 0
• donor records and the amounts and regularity of s uch donations , including any
• records relating to the b eneficiaries , whether p atients or medical staff, together with
the qualifications of the medical staff and their suitab ility for typ es of grant;
• records relating to the p rogres s and final outcome of p atients in receip t of grants ;
• in the cas e of medical res earch there may b e further series of records that record the
results of the research as well as the outcomes of clinical trials , p atent ap p lications
• records in relation to ris k and liab ility, which may include any of the foregoing.
The scale in this case is not so significant as the complexity of the activity being carried out.
In a s mall manufacturing comp any the records s eries may b e s ignificantly more
s traightforward b ecaus e of the les s comp lex nature of the b us ines s. The methodology
contained in BIP 00 2 5 - 2 p rovides guidance on how to deal with the iss ue of defining the
Whether or not an organization is regulated in its b us iness s hould not neces sarily have
an imp act on the way in which it conducts itself with regard to records management.
What does make a difference however is the requirement of the environment for an
organization to demons trate its comp liance. The previous section on sector sp ecific
issues dealt with this at some length, b ut the key to these considerations in the strategy
is the extent to which the strategy needs to b e formally and externally demonstrab le.
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Th e rol e of re cord s m a n a g e m e n t i n corp ora te g ove rn a n ce
4. 4 P u b l i c or pri va te se ctor
Increasingly as the principles of corporate governance become tighter and more strictly
applied, the distinction between public and private sector becomes less stark. It will
always be the case however, that the public sector will continue to be required to
demonstrate greater accountability and visibility in its use of information.
In many countries there are now Freedom of Information Acts or equivalent pieces of
legislation, which mean that the rules by which organizations treat information, and
the range over access which they allow to it are set out in law. This requires yet a
further form of compliance.
• traceability;
• compliance;
• accountability;
• integrity; and
• availability of information.
4. 5 Tra ce a b i l i ty
The traceability of information connected with decisions which may be subj ect to issues
of governance is paramount. For example, in the case of charitable donations and their
intended destination, it is essential for the records of the donations themselves and the
destination and receipt of the funds to be traceable. This was vividly illustrated in the
media in 2001 by the questions raised over the amount and destination of funds raised
and distributed by a charitable organization. This demonstrated the high standards of
the records keeping within the charitable organization and the level of support which
the records staff were able to provide to the proper governance of the organization.
4. 6 C om p l i a n ce
These compliance regimes will vary from the strict and rigorous requirements of the
Financial Services Authority (FSA), the US federal body, the Securities and Exchange
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A m an ag em en t g u i d e to th e val u e of BS I SO 1 5489-1
It is also important to point out that however effectively a records management or any
other standard is implemented it will not of itself ensure that the correct actions and
decisions are effected; it will only ensure that they are properly recorded. In the case of
the pensions mis- selling events in the United Kingdom a few years ago, the systems of
compliance in place did at least point out the mis-selling, though they had not
prevented it occurring.
4. 7 Accou n tabi l i ty
4. 8 I n teg ri ty
Integrity is a fundamental building block of good governance, not j ust in the sense of
the integrity of those people responsible for the running of the organization and their
advisers. In the context of the implementation of BS ISO 1 5489-1 integrity is also
essential in the information on which they seek to rely for the proper ordering of the
affairs of the business.
The records systems should be capable of showing that the records being used are
indeed as they were originally created or if not why not, and when and by whom they
were changed and to what effect.
This integrity of information has been of huge importance in some of the most high
profile of recent governance cases. They appear to have been issues surrounding the
checks and balances in such cases and the availability in a timely way, at the right
level, of the appropriate records that were at the base of the subsequent investigations.
4. 9 Avai l abi l i ty
16
The role of records management in corporate governance
carried out s ome twelve months p revious ly. The letter exp ress ing the concerns had
given limited time to resp ond. Immediately the cas e files were requis itioned from the
archive where they were systematically filed and readily availab le.
Fortunately they were retrieved in s ufficient time to res p ond fully to the enquiry. This
availab ility was imp ortant. E qually fortunately the cas e files were als o traceab le and
had integrity s o that not only was correct handling of the matter demons trated, b ut the
files showed that this was true from the outs et b y the nature and content of
documentation. Therefore b oth comp liance with the firm’s p olicies and accountab ility to
These b rief examp les s how that, as in the cas e of knowledge management, although
good records management will not ens ure good governance, lack of a high s tandard of
record keep ing can render good corp orate governance all b ut imp os sib le.
17
5 How to develop a records
management strategy: sector
specific examples
5. 1 G e n e ra l pri n ci pl e s
BIP 0025- 2 provides a good and robust methodology for the development of a records
strategy. The methodology described is the Australian DIRKS methodology [1 ] , see
BIP 0025-2, which is rigorous but flexible enough to accommodate a variety of approaches.
It is appropriate here, though, to suggest how to set the overall business context of a
strategic initiative for records management. This context has to articulate what should
be established at senior level for a records management strategy or, for that matter,
any strategy to be effective.
This may seem a curious statement; after all, presumably a strategy for managing
records is exactly that. Whilst true this is not the only purpose. The strategy should
have behind it a statement or set of statements about how the processes of the
organization will use and benefit from the activities implied by such a strategy.
• the purposes and obj ectives in the business which the records management strategy
supports;
• the people, departments or groups (customers, suppliers, etc. ) who will be the
beneficiaries of the strategy’s results;
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A m an ag em en t g u i d e to th e val u e of BS I SO 1 5489-1
5. 2. 1 I n en erg y
For a major power generating company the records management strategy was a way to
reduce the space required in a new headquarters building by 25 % whilst improving the
speed of access of power station records and providing a higher level of productivity
from some of the engineering sections.
• The beneficiaries of the strategy’s results were the engineers and the facility
designers and managers, but first and foremost the users of records in the various
specialist departments.
• The group that implemented and operated it were the skilled records personnel who
had to acquire new skills to manage the centralized and automated records.
• What it accomplished was a significant reduction in space required, together with
clearly established service levels for retrieval speed and for accuracy of retrieval and
classification.
• The point of view was to move from a bureaucratic paper based engineering and
science driven system to a modern, competitive, cost conscious, business driven
operation.
• Who owns it? – The senior functional managers not the records management
specialists.
• The environment of the strategy: privatization in a period of intense financial and
operational pressure.
For a nuclear resources company the fundamental purpose was to support the safety
regime and the engineering integrity of the organization.
• The purpose was to enhance an already effective records function to a computer
supported system which allowed records to be viewed as a component of an
integrated knowledge management system across the business.
• The beneficiaries of the strategy’s results would be the scientific and technical staff
but also the commercial staff who were charged with extending the services of the
organization.
• Those implementing and operating it were the information professionals and the
technical and scientific staff.
• What it will accomplish? Higher productivity, savings in staff and overhead cost,
greater opportunity for new applications of knowledge.
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H ow to d e ve l op a re cord s m a n a g e m e n t stra te g y: se ctor sp e ci fi c e xa m p l e s
• The p oint of view of technical records and scientific knowledge b eing a commercially
and technically valuab le resource to b e hus b anded, exp loited and develop ed.
• The environment of the s trategy: an aggres sively growing and highly efficient
commercial organization with its roots in the s cientific tradition b ut with its future
5. 2 . 2 I n fi n a n ci a l se rvi ce s
For a financial s ervices comp any the records management s trategy was des igned to
p rovide a higher level of acces s to the investment records and corresp ondence of p rivate
clients .
• The p urp os e of the p roj ect was to try to p rovide the organization with comp etitive
advantage b y ens uring that it could p rovide b etter knowledge of their very wealthy
clients at lower unit cos t than their maj or comp etitors . Als o, whichever b ranch
worldwide a client walked into would have an equal knowledge of their affairs ,
• The b eneficiaries of the s trategy’s res ults were the organization through b etter
• Who will imp lement and op erate it? – A s p ecialist team from the organiz ation
imp lemented it b ut thereafter it was des igned to b e op erated b y the cas eworkers at
each location.
• What it will accomp lis h? – Better p rofitab ility p er client, lower cos t to s erve, higher
• The p oint of view that wealthy p eop le exp ect to b e known and s erved to an excellent
standard wherever they contact the organiz ation in which they p lace their wealth
• The environment of the s trategy: highly comp etitive financial s ervices s ector in an
5. 2 . 3 A n a ti o n a l m u se u m
For a national museum the p urp os e was to imp rove the quality and rigour of the
• The p urp os es of the p roj ect were to imp lement records management in a way that
facilitated the records thems elves b eing viewed as an as s et of the mus eum as well
as simp ly an adj unct of the items in the collections. The records contained mas ses of
extremely valuab le information ab out the items and were often valuab le in
themselves either b ecause of the information they contained or b ecaus e of the time,
• The beneficiaries of the strategy’s results would be the public, because the descriptions
and interp retations of the collections would b e richer and more lively and the
curatorial staff who would have greater acces s to b etter res ources in their work.
• Who will imp lement and op erate it? – The curatorial staff would b oth imp lement
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A m an ag em en t g u i d e to th e val u e of BS I SO 1 5489-1
• What it will accomp lis h? – S ignificant b enefits in terms of research and learning
ab out the collections ’ ab ility to attract a greater numb er and divers ity of vis itors ,
exp loitation of the collections and higher standards of p rofess ional s ervice.
• The p oint of view that the collections of a mus eum s hould b e dis p layed and
exp lained to b es t p oss ib le effect as a contrib ution to education learning and s cience.
• Who owns it? – The Pub lic as ultimate owners of the nations collections .
• The environment of the s trategy: increasing p ress ure on mus eums to j us tify the
money s p ent on them and the resources rep res ented b y their collections .
In each of thes e examp les the fact that these statements of s trategic p urp os e had b een
articulated meant that the records management s trategy lived for the p eop le it affected
The records management strategy b ecame a p owerful tool to help b ring ab out s ome
change for the b etter in the way the organiz ations carried out their p rocess es, not j ust
H aving articulated this p roces s, the method us ed to derive a s trategy s hould then
enab le the team develop ing it to identify what p roces ses us e records and how they us e
them. For examp le, in the case of the p ower station the p hys ical and comp uter- b as ed
records for design and b uild needed to b e availab le to ens ure effective maintenance of
the facility. Typ ically this would mean having acces s to b oth the des ign and the ‘as -
b uilt’ records.
A comp any was p romp ted to ask for a records management strategy b y an incident in
which the des ign documents were used to order a rep lacement length of p ip ing.
Unfortunately in the actual b uilt case, the p ip e us ed was s ome 8 cm wider. The cost of
this mistake alone was £ 65 , 000. The comp any quickly develop ed and imp lemented a
s trategy to ensure that the records management s ys tem made it easier to avoid this
typ e of mis take and to acces s the correct vers ions of drawings.
In the cas e of the nuclear res ources comp any, the underlying p urp os e was to imp rove
the res p onsivenes s and accuracy of retrieval of the already very effective records and
comp any was ab le to give the new p roj ect s tructure and b us ines s focus as well as
p rofes s ional rigour, which greatly imp roved the outcome of the p roj ect and the quality
When thes e statements have b een develop ed the hard work b egins of develop ing an
unders tanding of the categories of records to b e covered b y the s trategy, the rules and
p olicies and p roces s es governing all of the s tages in the records life cycle; their:
• cap ture;
• storage;
• access ;
22
How to develop a records management strategy: sector specific examples
• retention; and
In each of thes e areas the s trategy has to es tab lis h how thes e p roces ses are to b e
es tab lis hed or imp roved in line with BS IS O 1 5 489- 1 and how they are to b e
imp lemented. BIP 002 5 - 2 deals with these asp ects with clarity and in enough detail for
the imp lementation of a s trategy cons is tent with BS IS O 1 5 489- 1 . Finally, it is s trongly
recommended that organizations do not omit to develop a strategy in the way that has
23
6 Conclusion
In this short p ub lication, a case has b een s et out for ap p lying BS IS O 1 5 489- 1 . In the
p as t records management has scarcely b een the s exies t sub j ect at the b oardroom tab le,
if indeed it ever got that far. But organiz ations from every sector are now recognizing
the value and intellectual p rop erty which is hidden in their mass of records , whether
p ap er or electronically b ased. This intellectual p rop erty cannot b e ignored; it rep resents
the accumulated lab our of many skilled staff memb ers over many years. BS ISO 1 5489- 1
comes at a time when all organizations are s truggling to differentiate thems elves
agains t their comp etitors. For many the accumulated knowledge in their records s tores
contains the key to doing this . The ap p lication of the s tandard is the key to this s tore of
knowledge.
25
Bi bl i og raph y / Referen ces
.
Part 1 : General
BIP 0025-2:2002, Effectiv e records m anagem ent — Part 2: Practical im p lem entation of
.
BS ISO 1 5489- 1
BIP 0025-3:2003, Effectiv e records m anagem ent — Part 3: Perform ance m anagem ent for
.
BS ISO 1 5489- 1
PD ISO/TR 15489-2:2001, Inform ation and docum entation — Records m anagem ent —
.
Part 2: Guidelines
http://www.naa.gov.au/recordkeeping/dirks/dirksman/dirks.html
[2] Best, D (editor). The Fourth Resource — Inform ation and its m anagem ent . Gower,
London, 1996.
[3] Checkland, P. System s thinking, system s p ractice . Wiley, New York & Chichester,
1999.
27
Abou t th e au th or
D r D avi d B est Ph D ; M S c; FI M
D r D avid Bes t has cons ulted to many of the United Kingdom’s top government
dep artments and p ub lic comp anies in the area of records and information management
s ince 1 980. As a p artner in Touche Ros s and then the D eloitte C onsulting Group he has
b een resp ons ib le for the IT consulting p ractice in the London office and for the
E urop ean E nergy p ractice, as well as for a numb er of s enior p osts in the management
of the p ractice. H e has held the p os t of Vis iting Profess or in the D ep artment of
Information at S trathclyde Univers ity and is a memb er of the Advisory Board of the
S chool of Informatics in C ity Univers ity London. H e was ins trumental in founding the
s ub s idiary of Roundarch Inc. a j oint venture b etween D eloitte Ventures , the WPP
29