
Rethinking the Mechanics of Modern Content Management: From Paper to Paradox
Artificial Intelligence (AI) | Intelligent Document Processing
Enterprise content management has evolved but complexity has accelerated even faster.
According to AIIM, researchers have been tracking the size of information management stacks for over a decade. In 2013, a typical organization used four to five content systems. By 2024, that number has more than doubled. AIIM's latest research shows the average enterprise manages 10.39 different information management platforms and many still rely on manual processes to bridge the gaps between them.
Meanwhile, the volume and velocity of unstructured data are exploding. Many analysts estimate that 80–90% of all new enterprise data is unstructured, and it’s growing three times faster than structured data.
For information leaders, this creates a paradox: how do you maintain control, compliance, and performance when your content ecosystem keeps expanding—and so does your risk?
The answer isn’t just more tools. It’s smarter content.
The Shift from ECM to CPA
For years, enterprise content management (ECM) focused on one thing: secure document storage. Files were scanned, indexed, and stored in silos labeled “compliance,” “finance,” or “legal.” It worked until it didn’t.
As digital transformation accelerated, those static repositories created bottlenecks. Content was trapped. Processes were manual. And access was limited to those who knew where to look. That’s why leading organizations are shifting toward Content and Process Automation (CPA) a modern approach that combines traditional ECM with:
- AI and machine learning
- Robotic process automation (RPA)
- Intelligent data capture
- Natural-language search and classification
- Workflow orchestration
In short, CPA doesn’t just store documents. It activates them turning unstructured content into structured action.
AI in Content Management: From Search to Strategy
One of the most promising advances in modern content platforms is AI-powered intelligence not just for capture, but for context. Here’s what that looks like in practice:
- Semantic Search: Users can ask, “Show me all safety compliance forms from Q2 2023” and retrieve relevant content across formats, folders, and systems.
- Automated Tagging: AI identifies key entities, dates, and values within a document, applying metadata automatically for future retrieval and audit.
- Predictive Insights: ML algorithms detect trends (e.g., repeated payment exceptions in AP) and surface them for process improvement.
- Anomaly Detection: Systems flag missing files, policy violations, or abnormal activity for review without relying on users to notice.
These capabilities save time. But more importantly, they improve decision-making and reduce risk at scale.
Use Case Spotlight: Accounts Payable
If you’re looking for a high-ROI starting point for CPA, look no further than Accounts Payable. Despite digitization, many AP teams still rely on emailed invoices, PDF attachments, and shared spreadsheets. Manual keying, duplicate payments, and late approvals are common.
Modern CPA platforms streamline the entire invoice-to-pay cycle:
- Intelligent Capture extracts invoice data across formats
- Automated Matching connects invoices to POs and receipts
- Workflow Routing sends approvals to the right people with full audit tracking
- ERP Integration posts transactions directly into financial systems
The result?
- 70–90% faster invoice approvals
- 50–80% reduction in manual data entry
- Improved vendor relationships and discount capture
And because the system enforces governance rules, finance leaders gain peace of mind during audits.
Interoperability: Why It Matters More Than Ever
It’s no longer enough to have “a system.” Most organizations have ten or more. The challenge isn’t just managing content, it’s connecting it. Modern CPA platforms are designed with interoperability at the core. That means:
- APIs and integrations to ERP, CRM, HRIS, and cloud storage
- Workflow triggers based on events across systems (e.g., “when a new contract is signed…”)
- Unified search across content types and repositories
- Centralized audit trails and compliance dashboards
When your systems talk to each other, your people work smarter—not harder.
Measuring the Impact: From Cost to Capability
It’s tempting to think of CPA purely as a cost-reduction strategy. And yes, the efficiencies are real. But the long-term value lies in:
- Agility – adapting processes without rebuilding them from scratch
- Resilience – maintaining business continuity even during workforce disruption
- Data leverage – turning documents into structured, analyzable insights
- Governance – ensuring compliance isn’t dependent on people remembering policies
According to IDC, organizations embracing intelligent automation in information management report 2x higher productivity, 30–50% faster process cycles, and lower audit prep time by up to 80%.
The Takeaway: Start with Content That Moves
The best place to start? Find the content that moves.
Whether it’s invoices, contracts, inspection reports, or employee files start with high-volume, high-risk processes and automate those first. Then scale to other workflows using the same intelligence, governance, and integrations.
You don’t need to rip and replace. You need to think beyond paper—and beyond silos.
Learn more about modern content management with a new resource from DocStar and AIIM.
About Luke Sigrist
Luke Sigrist is Director of Sales for Epicor’s ECM and Grow solutions, helping organizations modernize content management and streamline document-heavy workflows. With over 15 years of experience in enterprise content management and process automation, Luke works closely with customers to design and implement solutions that improve efficiency, strengthen compliance, and deliver measurable ROI. His expertise spans document management, workflow optimization, system integration, and digital transformation strategies that align technology capabilities with real-world business needs. Luke is passionate about helping organizations move beyond paper toward smarter, more connected, and future-ready ways of working.