Document Imaging Services provided by US Imaging of Birmingham
Document Imaging Services Document Imaging Scanning Document Imaging Solution Document Imaging Birmingham Document Imaging
 

 

Business Models that Benefit From Document Imaging:

Real Estate
Government
Healthcare Systems
Financial Services
Legal Departments
Education
Non-Profit
Law Enforcement
Construction
Manufacturing
Transportation
Utilities

If you believe your company could benefit from cost effective document imaging and retrieval, please call 205-822-6886 for a complimentary personalized consultation with your own data. Or send email requests to:
usimaging@bellsouth.net

Is the paper in your office multiplying faster than you can handle?

Does your office have a paper filing & retrieval problem?

Does it just continue to grow?

Grow and Grow and GROW?

If you have you ever heard ANY of the following statements we have the solution:

…I’ve spent hours looking for that file and still can’t find it!

…We’re required to keep these records, but we’re out of space!

…If we could get rid of these file cabinets, we could add new salespeople!

…If we had a fire, flood or a tornado, we’d lose all our records!

…I wish more than one person could access a record at the same time!

…I can’t find Mr. Smith’s file!

…Where are the other papers that belong in this file?

…We’re paying a lot of money every month for off-site storage and the files are getting damaged!

…We started scanning our files but we can’t keep up, let alone make a dent in our backlog!

…We’re scanning our files but our indexing and retrieval system is too complicated. No one understands it!

US Imaging Has The Answer!

Today, the Federal Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 gives you an alternative. A PDF document is considered “original” and the “electronic paper” of today. Yesterday you had rooms full of boxes and paper. Today, you can make more productive use of that expensive space! Yesterday, you had to dig through files. Today, it’s a click away! Yesterday you worried about losing valuable confidential information through fire or theft. Today, it can be on your network and on CD. We will also keep a disaster recovery copy at our facility!

 

 

 

Tuscaloosa Document Imaging offers the following affordable services included in our process:

  • Convert Paper Files to Electronic Media (CD)
  • FREE Pickup and delivery
  • FREE Destruction of paper
  • FREE Archived disk of all your data at our facility
  • Installation of software on your system
  • Staff Training & Instruction
  • Legalized by US Federal Government

I'm Interested: Tell Me More!

Tuscaloosa Businesses that can benefit from Document Imaging:

Real Estate
Military
Government
Healthcare Systems

Financial Services
Legal Departments
Education
Non-Profit Organizations
Law Enforcement
Construction
Manufacturing
Transportation
Utilities

If you believe your Tuscaloosa company could benefit from cost effective document imaging, please call 205-822-6886 for a complimentary personalized consultation with your own data. Or send email requests to:
usimaging@bellsouth.net

US Imaging of Tuscaloosa offers FREE Pickup & Delivery for the following services:

Document Imaging Tuscaloosa, Document Imaging Tuscaloosa, AL, Document Imaging Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Document Imaging Tuscaloosa Alabama, Document Imaging Services in Tuscaloosa, Document Imaging Services in Tuscaloosa, AL, Document Imaging Outsourcing, Document Imaging Outsourcing in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Professional Document Imaging, Professional Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Personalized Document Imaging, Secure Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa, Al, Safe Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa, Al, Affordable Document Imaging, Affordable Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa, Al, Easy Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa.

A little about Tuscaloosa, Alabama

The settlement was first established in 1702, at Twenty-seven Mile Bluff on the Tuscaloosa River, as the capital of the French colony of Louisiana. Following a series of floods, the town was relocated downriver to its present location near the head of Tuscaloosa Bay in 1711. The capital of Louisiana was moved to New Orleans in 1723 and Tuscaloosa was relegated to the role of frontier town and trading post.

Tuscaloosa was transferred to the British in 1763 as a result of the Treaty of Paris. The immediate British enforcement of race codes threw the denizens of the French-derived culture into chaos. The French Creole world was noted for its laissez-faire attitude to racial matters and the stringent English codes chased many of Tuscaloosa's Creole residents westward into Louisiana. It also marked a slight cultural division point between Tuscaloosa and the rest of the French-founded coast.

The port town was captured by the Spanish in 1780 during the American Revolutionary War. The Spanish held Tuscaloosa until 1814 when it was captured by the American General Wilkinson; by then it was the second largest seaport on the Gulf Coast.

The Cotton Boom of the early 19th century brought an explosion of commerce to what had been a sleepy frontier town. By the 1850s, Tuscaloosa was one of the 4 busiest ports in the country.

In another note of differentiation between the somewhat cosmopolitan port and the hinterlands of predominantly Protestant Alabama, Tuscaloosa was declared an archdiocese of the Catholic Church in this same period. In 1830, the Jesuit Order of the Catholic Church founded Spring Hill College, one of the oldest Catholic schools in the country.

One incident of some historical interest occurred in 1860, when the Clotilde, the last known ship to arrive in the Americas with a cargo of slaves, was abandoned by its captain near Tuscaloosa. A number of the slaves escaped and formed their own community on the banks of the Tuscaloosa River, which became known as Africatown. The inhabitants of this community retained their African customs and language well into the 20th century.

Tuscaloosa grew substantially in the period leading up to the American Civil War when it was heavily fortified and held by the Confederates. Union naval forces established a blockade under the command of Admiral David Farragut. Farragut did not attack Tuscaloosa until August 1864. The ensuing Battle of Tuscaloosa Bay was a Union victory but Tuscaloosa held out for another nine months. During the later federal occupation of Tuscaloosa, in May, 1865, an ammunition depot explosion -- called the great Tuscaloosa magazine explosion -- killed some 300 people.

After the war, the harbor was substantially improved and deepened, and ship-building became a notable industry.

During World War II, the port town predictably livened up. Industry accelerated with the increase in ship-building. Workers from outlying areas moved into Tuscaloosa to fill jobs on the waterfront and many stayed after the war's conclusion.

In the post-War years, the Brookley Air Base was built in Tuscaloosa. The phenomenal influx of workers from the surrounding rural areas expanded the population in leaps and bounds. By 1956, Tuscaloosa's square mileage had tripled to accommodate the growth. Brookley's closure in the mid-1960s sent economic tremors through the area which took many years to absorb.

In 1964, the University of South Alabama opened its doors and its tremendous impact on the community and economy was deeply felt in a variety of sectors.

Tuscaloosa's seafood industry rose to a position of note for a while, with Tuscaloosa Bay oysters acclaimed far and wide, but this waned almost to the point of extinction in the last quarter of the 20th century. A few shrimpers still hang on in the South Tuscaloosa County fishing village of Bayou La Batre, immortalized in the book and film Forrest Gump, but their future appears uncertain.

Four members of the Baseball Hall of Fame were born in Tuscaloosa: Hank Aaron, Willie McCovey, Satchel Paige and Ozzie Smith.

Notable yearly activities that take place in Tuscaloosa include the Senior Bowl, Mardi Gras (the oldest in the country), the GMAC Bowl, the Azalea Trail Run, and the Junior Miss Pageant.

The eastern shore of Tuscaloosa Bay periodically experiences a unique phenomenon called a Jubilee. A jubilee, which usually takes place in the wee hours of warm nights, describes a massive upsurge of sea life from the bottom of the bay. This phenomenon has also been observed in a similar bay in Japan and is believed to be caused by low oxygen levels in the water. This upsurge to the surface usually consists of crabs, shrimp, flounder and other sea delicacies. Needless to say, a jubilee, when first realized, is quickly spread by word of mouth along the coast, providing an impromptu fishing party in the middle of the night.

On November 10th 1993 Tuscaloosa formally twinned with the Japanese city of Ichihara, Chiba prefecture.

Q: My files are messy, how should I prepare them?
Q: How will you label my files?
Q: How do my files get back on my system?
Q: What about my new files?
Q: Can the CD data be altered?
Q: How Much? Can I see a demo?
Q: What industries are using document imaging?

Call Don DiPlacido at 205-822-6886 for a personalized demonstration using your own data.

" Did You Know? "

• 90% of corporate memory exists on paper.
• Of pages that get handled in the office, 90% are merely shuffled.
• The average document gets copied 19 times.
• Companies spend $20.00 in labor to file a document. $ 120.00 in labor to find a misfiled document, and $ 220.00 in labor to produce a lost document.
• 7.5 % of all documents get lost, 3 % of the remainder get misfiled.
• Professionals spend 5-15 % of their time reading information but 50 % looking for it.
• 4 Trillion paper documents are in the US alone, growing at a rate of 22 % per year.

Typical document management systems have the user scan in the original paper document, and store the image of the document in the document management system. The image is often given a name containing the date and the user is often asked to type in additional "tags" in order to make finding the image easier.

Slightly more advanced versions also perform an OCR on the image, storing the text along with the image. Although most OCR systems are notoriously inaccurate, even a few correct words scanned off the page can eliminate the need for the user to type in their own tags.

Once the document is stored, it is typically retrieved using an application that is aware of the way the tags (or scanned text) and image are related. That way when you search for "invoice", opening the document will in fact open the original image.

Document management systems can save a tremendous amount of time, even in cases with small numbers of documents, like home bill payment or personal tax preparation. It is somewhat odd that they aren't more widely used, but some of this is likely the fault of the scanning step. Many systems include their own high-speed black and white scanner to make this step as easy as possible, or can incorporate existing office MFPs.

Storing electronic documents is somewhat different but follows the same principle. Here, every kind of internal documentation of somebody (typically a company or corporation) is both written and stored electronically. Printed copies of documents need not even be produced, and documents may be electronically signed.

Electronic document management systems typically include a workflow model for certifying and electronically signing documents.

Electronic document management systems can be extended to support requirements under the HIPAA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996) and Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 by addition of digital rights management controls including real-time network/application/file monitoring and policy control. This gives auditors, administrators and directors documented evidence of internal controls that communicate, store, and protect documents and allows unalterable logs or databases of who has accessed which pieces of information, where and when. It also gives fine-grained control of who can access, view, print or forward any particular document or group of documents.

About our Process

• Compact & easily stored (One CD holds up to 25,000 pages!)
• No software or hardware to lease or purchase
• Recognized as legal by US federal court system
• Completely confidential, secure, and insured
• Instant file retrieval
• Multiple search fields
• Accessible to more than one user simultaneously
• Reduces labor, cuts costs, saces time
• No more misfiled or lost documents
• No more off site storage fees
• Free pick up and delivery

Document Imaging of Birmingham offers the following affordable services included in our process:

  • Convert Paper Files to Electronic Media (CD)
  • Document Imaging & Scanning
  • Optional Secure Destruction of Sensative Files
  • Imaging Verification by live technician
  • Installation of software on your system
  • Staff Training & Instruction
  • Offsite Backup

I'm Interested: Tell Me More!

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What if my files are a mess? What do I need to do to get them ready for scanning?

A: You don't have to do anything to your files! We scan them as they are. Notes on the file covers, sticky notes, etc...will be scanned as well. No information will be lost or overlooked.

Q: How do you know how to label my files so I can find them in my system?

A: Indexing can be done in several different ways and we will consult with you before processing any of your files. The indexing is customized to match your current filing methods.

Q: How do the files get into our system so we can access them?

A: After we have scanned the files, we'll transfer the data to a CD which contains images of all pages of each individual file. The CD can be read in a CD-ROM drive, saved to a computer hard drive, or hosted on a network. If you have a network, everybody can access the same data at the same time.

Q: What happens after all the old stuff is on CD? We are making new files and adding paperwork everyday. Won't there be a gap?

A: Old data is stored and archived on seperate CDs. Your current workflow documents will be periodically converted to digital files as your situation dictates.

Q: What kind of Data Security is there? Could someone change the data in a scanned file?

A: Good Question! NOBODY will be able to alter any data on your CD's. All data will be converted to PDF, which keeps anyone from adding or deleting any data.

Q: How much does it cost and can you do a sample of our archives so we can try it out first?

A: In order to give you a detailed quote, we will gladly create a trial-sized demo CD of you actual files digitally converted with no obligation to you. Based on your demo file we'll determine what we'll change for the complete project.

Q: What are the industries that use your services?

A: We serve many industries, including:
- Realtors
- Builders
- Developers
- Architects
- Contractors
- Mortgage Companies
- Auto dealers
- Universities & Colleges
- Doctors - HIPPAA compliance, our document management solution is perfect for patient records.

For answers to YOUR questions, call 205-822-6886 or E-mail us.

US Imaging of Tuscaloosa offers FREE Pickup & Delivery for the following services:

Document Imaging Tuscaloosa, Al, Document Imaging Tuscaloosa, AL, Document Imaging Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Document Imaging Tuscaloosa Alabama, Document Imaging Services in Tuscaloosa, Document Imaging Services in Tuscaloosa, AL, Document Imaging Outsourcing, Document Imaging Outsourcing in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Professional Document Imaging, Professional Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, Personalized Document Imaging, Secure Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa, Al, Safe Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa, Al, Affordable Document Imaging, Affordable Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa, Al, Easy Document Imaging in Tuscaloosa.

A little about Tuscaloosa, Alabama,

Tuscaloosa is a city in west central Alabama, on the Black Warrior River in Tuscaloosa County. The seat of Tuscaloosa County, it is the fifth-largest city in the state with a population of 79,294 (2003 U.S. Census Bureau Estimate).

Tuscaloosa occupies a unique location at the fall line of the Black Warrior River on the boundary between the Appalachian Highland and the Gulf Coastal Plain approximately 311 km (120 mi.) upriver from the river's confluence with the Tombigbee River in Demopolis. Consequently, the geography of the area around Tuscaloosa is quite diverse, being hilly and forested to the northeast and low-lying and marshy to the southwest.

Tuscaloosa is the center of industry, commerce, healthcare, and education for the region commonly known as West Alabama. Tuscaloosa is home to the University of Alabama, Stillman College, and Shelton State Community College. Additionally, the city is home to the region's largest mall and hospital.

The name of Tuscaloosa and the river come from two Choctaw Indian words, tushka (warrior) and lusa (black). It is assumed that the city received its name from the Choctaw chief Tascaluza/Tuskalusa, who was defeated by Hernando de Soto in 1540 in the Battle of Mauvila.

Tuscaloosa boasts a highly diversied economy. Approximately twenty-seven percent of the workplace is employed by government, which includes major health care and education related employment; twenty-two percent in retail and wholesale trade; sixteen percent in manufacturing; nineteen percent in services; and the balance of the workforce spread among construction, transportation, finance, insurance, real estate and public services. As a consequence of its diverse econonmy, Tuscaloosa has a very low rate of unemployment, one of the lowest in Alabama at around 3%.

The city's industrial base includes Uniroyal Goodrich Tire Manufacturing (a division of Michelin), JVC America [1], Phifer Wire Products, Gulf States Paper Corporation, and the Mercedes-Benz U.S. International, Inc., assembly plant [2], which began assembling the Mercedes-Benz M-Class in 1997 and will begin assembling the R-Class Grand Sport Tourer, and its associated supplier plants.

Healthcare and education serve as the cornerstone of Tuscaloosa's service sector, which includes the University of Alabama, DCH Regional Medical Center, Bryce State Mental Hospial, Camp Partlow State Development Center, and the Tuscaloosa VA Medical Center.

The city is home to the region's two largest malls, University Mall and McFarland Mall, as a well as large array of retail options.

The area at the fall line of what would be later known as the Black Warrior River had long been well known to the various Indian tribes whose shifting fortunes brought them to West Alabama. The river shoals at Tuscaloosa represented the southernmost site on the river which could be forded under most conditions. Inevitably, a network of Indian trails converged upon the place, the same network which, in the first years of the 19th Century began to lead a few intrepid white frontiersmen to the area.

The pace of white settlement increased greatly after the War of 1812, and a small assortment of log cabins soon arose near the large Creek village at the fall line of the river, which the settlers named in honor of the legendary Chief Tuskalusa. In 1817, Alabama became a territory, and on December 13, 1819, the territorial legislature incorporated the town of Tuscaloosa, exactly one day before Congress admitted Alabama to the Union as a state.

From 1826 to 1846 Tuscaloosa was the capital of Alabama. During this period, in 1831, the University of Alabama was established. The town's population and economy grew rapidly until the departure of the capital to Tuscaloosa caused a rapid decline in population. Establishment of the Bryce State Hospital for the Insane in Tuscaloosa in the 1850s helped restore the city's fortunes. During the Civil War following Alabama's secession from the Union, several thousand men from Tuscaloosa fought in the Confederate armies. During the last weeks of the War, a brigade of Union troops raiding the city burned the campus of the University of Alabama. Tuscaloosa, too, suffered much damage from the battle and shared fully in the South's economic sufferings which followed the defeat.

The construction of a system of locks and dams on the Black Warrior River by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in the 1890s opened up an inexpensive link to the Gulf seaport of Mobile, stimulating especially the mining and metallurgical industries of the region. By the advent of the 20th Century, the growth of the University of Alabama and the mental healthcare facilities in the city, along with strong national economy fueled a steady growth in Tuscaloosa which continued unabated for 100 years. The addition of the manufacturing plants of large firms such as Michelin and JVC in the latter half of the 20th Century. However, it was the announcement of the addition of the Mercedes facility in 1993 that best personifed the new era of economic prosperity for Tuscaloosa.

 
 
Copyright © 2007 US Imaging of Birmingham. All Rights Reserved.
Provided by: www.GotPlacement.com