For better or worse, the future of document assembly is on the Web. The web offers cheaper maintenance, quicker updates, and a more consistent look and feel. The web is also the most cost-effective on total cost of ownership ("TCO"). The catch is that startup costs are much greater for web deployment of automated templates. Particularly since most law firms wish to “dip before they dunk”, the presence of desktop or networked document assembly solutions is critical to the development of automated content. In the past five years, millions of dollars have been invested in innovative web-delivery of automated document creation systems. By contrast, the investment in client/server based document assembly software has been minimal.
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Future of Document Assembly
Posted by Seth
Friday, May 06, 2005
Getting Past the 80/20 Rule in Building Document Assembly Applications
[ read full article • published to DealBuilder • Document Assembly • Template Markup • GhostFill • Templates • HotDocs • Templates ]
Document assembly projects are subject to the 80/20 rule ... the final 20% takes 80% of the time. And for that reason, many projects don’t get perfected. When a system is for internal use, the benefits of automation are good enough; but when turned into an saleable application, or a client-focused application, much more is required. This blog focuses on techniques for working with the template to reduce the time to get from 80 to 100%.
Posted by Seth
Page 1 of 1 pages
Statistics
Page Views: 150423
Page rendered in 0.5543 seconds
36 queries executed
Total Entries: 79
Most Recent Entry: 04/01/2008 04:26 pm
Total Members: 5
Total Logged in members: 0
Total guests: 3
Most Recent Visitor on: 05/16/2008 10:22 pm
Most visitors ever: 87 on 11/07/2006 02:22 pm
Total Logged in members: 0
Total guests: 3
Most Recent Visitor on: 05/16/2008 10:22 pm
Most visitors ever: 87 on 11/07/2006 02:22 pm