24 Feb 2008 12:33:29 | Trevor Marshall
What do the following industries have in common?
Law enforcement Legal industries Government Banking Health care
Financial service (brokerage) Entertainment Technology
Manufacturing industries
The answer: The above-mentioned industries regard information as
a very important aspect of their operations. They are
information-sensitive - they have a need to ensure that
important and confidential data are secured and protected at all
times.
What data are considered classified? Some are listed below:
Disbursement records (Wages, etc.) Accounts records (financial
statements such as the balance sheet, etc.) Sales receipts Bank
records Social Security records Business letters Customer
information Personnel records Computer printouts Computer discs
or tapes
Why is there a need to protect such data? Industries are in
constant danger of having such sensitive information to 'fall
into the wrong hands' - people that are out to inflict damage,
such as a discontented employee or a competitor, which could
result to either of the following:
Bad publicity Humiliation Loss of staff or key personnel
(probably to a competitor) Loss of customers Loss of job or
running out of business A possible indictment
This is why every information-sensitive industry needs a proper
and secure records storage and management. However, such course
of action usually requires much room (think of all those years'
worth of papers and electronic tapes piling up); it also incurs
high costs. In addition, there will also come a time when the
company will need to purge itself of the age-old materials. But
these outdated materials will still be sensitive, and throwing
away classified documents in a wastebasket will not do the trick
- they can still be collected and sorted out, the information
still made available to whoever would want them.
There is a truly a great need for a secure disposal of sensitive
data, and an effective solution to this crucial aspect of an
industry is document shredding.
Document shredding is a safe and secure option for discarding
restricted documents and materials. In document shredding,
sensitive files and records are destroyed, turning them into
bits that can no longer be recognized; thereby ensuring that
confidentiality is maintained.
The document shredding process is entirely flexible that it can
adapt to any industry's distinct requirements in destroying
sensitive records. Depending on what would suit it's needs, a
company can either purchase it's own document shredder or employ
outsourced document shredding services, who can then perform the
document shredding process on-site or off-site.
On-site document shredding provides industries with the
opportunity to observe the actual shredding of their materials
'on site', right at their doorsteps. The use of mobile shredding
vehicles and equipment will especially fit those who do not want
their records to leave their site intact.
In an off-site document shredding, the document-shredding
company collects the materials in security containers and hauls
them in a safe location that may be monitored by security
cameras where they are destroyed into little pieces. Aside from
the surveillance cameras, industries can also send
representatives to personally observe the actual document
shredding process.
Once the classified records are destroyed in a proper and secure
manner, the document shredding company will then provide its
client with a "Certificate of Destruction," which notes the date
and time as well as the accounting of the materials shredded.
This not only serves as a proof that the documents were
destroyed properly; it also gives the client the necessary data
for an audit trail.
There are many advantages in making use of the services of an
outside document shredding company:
A document shredding service enables the company to save
thousands of dollars by not having to buy a document shredding
equipment and not having to worry of the depreciation as well as
the maintenance costs.
A document shredding service also enables the company to save in
terms of labor. Employees would not need to spend hours to do
the document shredding. Employees can spend the time more
effectively by doing their own jobs.
A document shredding company also helps the environment by
recycling. Recycling is the final step in almost all the
document shredding process. The shredded materials are collected
and, through baling and/or pulping, can be used again to form
other items such as boxes and copier papers, among others.
We cannot deny that protecting the interests of a company
remains a crucial phase of every business, especially in this
age of information. And with document shredding, we are not only
securing an industry's information, we are also helping the
environment - a win-win solution.
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