See correction below

EMC Documentum 5 Enterprise Content Management Platform
EMC, emc.com/documentum
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Excellent 8.8 |
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| criteria |
score |
weight |
| Administration |
8 |
20% |
 |
| Interoperability |
9 |
20% |
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| Security |
9 |
20% |
 |
| Features |
9 |
10% |
 |
| Implementation |
9 |
10% |
 |
| Scalability |
10 |
10% |
 |
| Value |
8 |
10% |
 |
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Cost: Starts at $50,000
Platforms: OSes: Solaris, Windows, HP-UX, and IBM AIX. Databases: Oracle, SQL Server, DB/2, and Sybase databases. App servers: J2EE servers
Bottom Line: EMC Documentum 5 Enterprise Content Management Platform adds virtual workplaces to an excellent document management core app,
delivering document authoring, library services, and security. From here, companies can choose from many add-ons, including
document retention, business process, and compliance. This foursome yields a unified way to manage documents from creation
through disposal. The Web UI and embedded search provide a fine user experience.
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About our Reviews and Scoring Methodology
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EMC Documentum is synonymous with enterprise content management. Picking and configuring appropriate components from the company’s
product set -- over 100 different systems -- takes research and work. But stick with the process and you’ll be rewarded with
a solution that doesn’t feel cobbled together; rather, it’s one of the best at solving various particular content problems,
anything from project collaboration to managing documents in order to satisfy ISO 9001 certification.
For my test, I evaluated four components that specifically address EDM (enterprise document management) needs. EMC Documentum
5 Enterprise Content Management Platform formed the core of the testbed. Beyond key components of an EDM system, including
version control and library services, this product provides secure virtual rooms in which teams work on documents.
Of course, many enterprises (such as financial service companies) do volume-document processing. For this aspect, I used EMC
Documentum Business Process Management (BPM) to build workflows. Finally, given the importance of compliance and document
retention, I also evaluated RPS (Retention Policy Services) and the Compliance Manager module.
Distilled to the essentials, an EDM system allows for creating (or capturing) documents, editing them, approving workflows
that result in publishing material, and ultimately preserving or destroying these items.
My first test simulated a situation fairly typical of any enterprise: Sales, engineering, and other departments need a repository
to control technical and marketing publications. EMC Documentum offers multiple ways for users to interact with this content.
Microsoft Office integration let me open PowerPoint, create a presentation, and save it directly to the document repository.
Interesting things happen with the collaborative capabilities of the EMC Documentum system. First, my presentation was placed
in the appropriate private room based on meta information I entered. Next, designated reviewers were notified so the team
could discuss and edit the document. Once all members were satisfied, the presentation was automatically moved to a public
folder, locked against changes, and marked to be retained for six years (to meet compliance regulations). That type of tight
content management and collaboration is rare; it signals how well EMC Documentum understands -- and streamlines -- the document
management process.
It’s easy for admins to add additional meta fields, adjust retention rules, and specify conversion to other formats, including
HTML and PDF. Further, Documentum Client for Outlook, another interface, provides a single point for managing e-mail and documents.
My second test involved an elaborate high-volume mortgage loan approval process, which could easily translate into other industries.
The BPM module takes center stage here. The graphical process manager helps developers quickly specify actions, such as document
capture, routing, and approval.
I started this test by scanning a paper loan application, performing optical character recognition (so the data could be stored
in a repository), and converting the document into a PDF. Simultaneously, the process called an external Web service to retrieve
current loan rates. These parts formed the start of a virtual document that was routed through different departments for approvals.
The UI here is Webtop, a browser interface that can be customized for specific tasks using a Web development kit. For instance,
in this loan setting a tab opened a checklist of required documents -- with another tab providing quick access to all the
files.
Most impressive is BPM’s intelligence. For example, an e-mail was triggered asking for the applicant’s employment verification.
The reply was automatically added to the client’s virtual document. The process manager also monitors the work queue, which
ensures that a particular person isn’t given an unbalanced workload. And finally, the completed file was locked and assigned
a retention period.
There’s a lot more going on here. In the background, for example, Compliance Manager enforces digital signatures and ensures
content authenticity. It also detects attempts to alter or remove documents.
I found RPS equally significant. Besides enforcing routine retention rules, admins can quickly lock down any content that
might be related to an audit or investigation. RPS is also storage-aware; documents are automatically archived to the most
cost-effective system (which can be EMC or third-party hardware) according to how often the files are accessed or where they
are in their lifecycle.
Various large organizations use Documentum to process tens of thousands of documents per hour. EMC also reports benchmarks
of a billion-object repository and 1,000 simultaneous users. Although I wasn’t able to fully test the limits of the solution’s
scalability, these claims are certainly plausible.
A final test involved Content Integration Services -- an interesting search capability (which is available from Webtop) that
federates results from more than 300 sources. Using adapters, the system clusters results from Google, proprietary apps, databases,
and premium Web subscriptions. Documentum seems to have quietly solved another vexing enterprise issue: precisely locating
documents and information from a single interface.
This unified theme is really central to Documentum solutions. While I focused on document management, the single database
processing engine and security model applies when enterprises add other components, such as Web content management, digital
asset management, or records management.
Systems of this scale are costly, reaching into the millions of dollars. But considering the price of mismanaging unstructured
information and the risks of noncompliance, EMC Documentum 5 should be a prudent investment.
Correction:
In this review, the name of EMC's product should have been EMC Documentum 5 Enterprise Content Management Platform. InfoWorld regrets the error, which has been corrected.