The biggest use case in our company, which I help support, is that our accounting department uses it to help compile and do all the tax returns that we use. We are a private company. We work for a wealthy Chicago family, and the accounting department handles thousands of tax returns that they do every year. We use the OpenText Capture product to bring in all the forms and documents and get them into the Content Server. We have built a workflow and reports around that process, which includes getting the documents, compiling the tax returns, having them go through multiple reviews, and then eventually filing them with the IRS.
By implementing this solution, the biggest challenge that we were trying to overcome was to give our accounting department a little bit more visibility into that workflow. Prior to this, they were literally doing everything on paper by hand. We wanted to automate the workflow and have a way to store those documents on a long term. We wanted them to be able to work from home without taking a stack of papers home with them. All these things were the big gains from moving over to it.
They handle thousands of tax returns a year. They are usually in the range of 3,000 to 5,000 every year. It was always a slog and a lot of work to get all that done on time and racing against the October 15th deadline. By giving them visibility in that process, they are now able to run some analytics and organize things better year to year. They can figure out when to do certain things in terms of timing, how things go in a sequential order, and what needs to be done before what. They have been able to do that a lot more easily. There is a lot less tracking of everything on a spreadsheet. They are able to see the data. That has been extremely helpful for them.
I have some personal success stories of some older people who have now retired. Seven or eight years ago when we first did this, they would say, "Why are we doing this? Our way works just fine. It is no big deal." We implemented it, and a year later, we went back and talked to them, and they said, "We actually know what everything is. It is amazing." That was nice. We want people over.
It allows them to collaborate more easily. The content silo here was that an accountant had the papers on their desk, so only they could work on them and look at them, whereas now, anybody can. Anybody who is in the approval process does not need to pick up papers and put them on somebody else's desk. There is a notification that says that somebody needs to go check this out.
Extended ECM has helped connect our content to our business processes. There is more flexibility. People only have to take their laptops home to do work now. This is something that we have been talking about for a decade but it was something that we were behind on. I am so glad that we already had this in place when COVID hit because otherwise, it would have been a disaster. Because it was in place, it was a pretty seamless transition.
Extended ECM has helped to increase productivity in our organization, but being on the IT side of things, I do not have the statistics that the account team might have. They are the ones who know how quickly things got done beforehand versus now. I only have a once-a-year meeting with them to discuss what we are improving on for the next year.