Document Capture is the act of inputting documents into
a system. Similar to using a copy machine, documents are passed through a
scanner, digitized and stored as electronic files on the hard drive or
network drive of the computer where the scanner is attached.
A single capture station includes: PC, Scanner, SCSI (or
other) card attaching the PC to the Scanner, SCSI drivers, Scanning
software and a scan operator.
The types of documents, scanner and software being used
all affect the speed, quality, and file size of the resulting documents.
Each capture solution may be different depending on how the documents will
be used and the document life cycle.
Low volume capture stations may consist of one scanner and
operator. High volume solutions may involve a dozen or more scanners,
operators, and specific tasks to operate each of the following queues or
steps below.
There are several steps in a successful capture
process:
- Document Sorting -
Organization of documents into similar batches so they can be scanned at
one time.
- Document Preparation -
Removing of paper clips, stables, rotated documents, sticky notes,
insertion of separator sheets, etc.
- Scanning - Operation of
the scanner and software to capture documents. This includes feeding the
documents into the scanner, clearing paper jams, deciding scanner
settings and storing documents post scan.
- Document Validation -
Review of scanned documents to ensure appropriate quality, orientation
and number of documents have been captured.
- Re-scanning - Correction of errors or missed
documents discovered in the validation process.
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