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Revised:  03/14/2004

Are You Really Computerized?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

You Can Achieve Enormous Gains In Productivity
By Realizing That Many Of Your "Computerized" Processes Are Actually Being Done Manually…

 

Enabling applications with automated processing techniques routinely allows increases in productivity in excess of 90% to be achieved - thus saving over 90% of your employees' time, and over 90% of your organization's dollars that were previously required for the same processes. 


Watch one of your people as he or she does word processing or some other data entry operation. Is the computer really doing most of the work, or, more likely, the person typing? In reality, in most cases, all that has occurred is that the manual process that was once done on paper has now been transferred to computer. However, most of the actual work, the processing, is still being done by hand! 

Why? How? Like the Year 2000 problem system inefficiency came about not because of true technology limitations but mainly because of the way computer systems have traditionally been implemented within most organizations. As pointed out above, it is usually incorrectly assumed that simply by computerizing a manual process, "computerized" processing is achieved… Not so! 

The book $GML: The Billion Dollar Secret (Chet Ensign, Prentice Hall) provides an outstanding executive-level overview of why and how savvy organizations as a whole are literally adding billions to their bottom lines. Organizations showcased include the ATA (Air Transport Association), Grolier, Mobil, the SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission), Sikorsky, Sybase, Inc., The United States Government, United Technologies, and others. The book focuses on documentation systems and document management, but similar principles can be applied to a large number of applications and business processes throughout your organization.

GRPMAX's ATR technology and Results First! program allow your organization to realize the benefits of significantly further automating your existing computerized processes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Last modified: March 14, 2004