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March of Dimes moves forward with SharePoint deployment

March of Dimes moves forward with SharePoint deployment

By:  Nestor E Arellano  On: 05 Mar 2007 For: ITWorldCanada.com Creator

For ever so long employees at the Ontario March of Dimes (OMOD)endured the time consuming task of processing over 400 different types of paper forms. All that changed – quite dramatically – when OMOD recently moved over to automated forms processing, deploying a system based on Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007

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Processing forms is not the most exciting work, and when you have thousands of them to sift through, the task can seem ever so onerous.

Until recently, that was the experience of Ontario March of Dimes (OMOD), a non-profit outfit that assists more than 37,000 physically challenged persons each year.

For ever so long, the organization, which has more than 2,000 employees, used to engage in manual, paper-based forms processing – a laborious, time-consuming task.

All that changed – quite dramatically – when OMOD recently moved over to automated forms processing, deploying a system based on Microsoft Office SharePoint Server 2007. According to the company, the most tangible impact of the shift was the huge reduction in document processing labour and time.

"What used to take days, now takes minutes," said Steve Driz, director of enterprise solutions and chief privacy officer at OMOD.

At the heart of the new system is an "employee portal" created by Bell Business Solutions Inc. and its partner EnvisionIT, a Mississauga, Ont.-based business automation firm. Access to forms has been simplified and speeded up.

Now instead of struggling with piles of paper, "employees can access forms from their browser, fill them out, and post them back to the portal in minutes," said Driz.

First established in 1951, OMOD provided aid to people ravaged by the polio epidemic, and was instrumental in creating the Salk anti-polio vaccine. Following the near eradication of the disease, the organization shifted its focus to helping people with physical disabilities. Today, OMOD reaches out to around 37,000 individuals in more than 70 communities across the province.

Part of this task, however, involves the use of nearly 400 different types of forms to support a variety of administrative process, ranging from employee attendance records to client status reports.

Previously, form templates were created in Microsoft Word or Excel documents and stored in Outlook messaging and public folders.

Driz said employees were frequently bogged down trying to find the right form to fill. Often a form had to be printed before being filled out by hand. The finished document would then be faxed or mailed between offices for approval.

In certain cases, these forms were e-mailed back and forth between a number of people, adding to the volume of data in the organization's mail server.

Driz said the process was a huge drain on resources, which OMOD soon decided it could no longer afford. "If it takes a form a day or two to get to a person's desk and another couple of days to get signed off and sent to the next person, it could take a week to approve even the simplest request."


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Nestor E Arellano Nestor E Arellano Nestor Arellano – Newswire Specialist Nestor edits and posts newswire content for ITWorldCanada’s online publications and e-newsletters. Nestor joined ITWC in 2006 as a senior writer and ... more

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