Ann Massie Nelson
Vol. 76, No. 8, August 2003
Find out how to protect electronic records in this third and final column in a series about managing your firm's most valuable tangible assets - your records - in a disaster.
by Ann Massie Nelson
Ann Massie Nelson is a regular contributor to Wisconsin Lawyer and communications director at Wisconsin Lawyers Mutual Insurance Co. (WILMIC) in Madison.
One-fourth of businesses never reopen following a disaster, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration and the Institute for Business & Home Safety. Will your firm be one of them? Back up every byte of information that passes through your law firm, some experts say, and you will never be caught off guard. But is the risk of losing vital records in a disaster worth the cost of creating and maintaining a mammoth electronic warehouse?
Electronically storing all the contents of your files - including externally created documents - entails considerable human effort and discipline. Costs include staff time, scanning equipment, imaging software, storage media, and the continuous need to convert data to newer and better configurations.
Most importantly, finding and reproducing the information you need in the days and weeks following a disaster could be a Herculean task, the proverbial needle in a bitmap.
Plans made in anticipation of Y2K often are credited for the quick recovery of organizations struck by subsequent disasters. According to Robert Hagness, a Mondovi sole practitioner and vice chair of the State Bar's Law Practice Section, an effective electronic records management plan gathers input from lawyers and staff and answers the following questions.
"Recovering from Disaster: Step by Step" (Script, Train, Execute, Process), a morning-long continuing legal education seminar for attorneys and staff, will be presented this fall at these four locations:
Thursday, Sept. 18, Skyline Golf Course, Black River Falls
Thursday, Sept. 25, The Waters, Minocqua
Friday, Sept. 26, The Osthoff Resort, Elkhart Lake
Friday, Oct. 10, Dodge Point Country Club, Dodgeville
Wisconsin Lawyers Mutual Insurance Company will apply for 3.0 CLE credits, including 2.0 EPR credits. All programs begin at 9 a.m. Call WILMIC at (800) 373-3839 or visit www.wilmic.com for details.
Wisconsin Lawyer