Six Roles of Documents in Professionals’ Work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Standard

Six Roles of Documents in Professionals’ Work. / Hertzum, Morten.

ECSCW'99: Proceedings of the Sixth European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work. Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999. p. 41-60.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingArticle in proceedingsResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hertzum, M 1999, Six Roles of Documents in Professionals’ Work. in ECSCW'99: Proceedings of the Sixth European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work. Kluwer Academic Publishers, pp. 41-60.

APA

Hertzum, M. (1999). Six Roles of Documents in Professionals’ Work. In ECSCW'99: Proceedings of the Sixth European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work (pp. 41-60). Kluwer Academic Publishers.

Vancouver

Hertzum M. Six Roles of Documents in Professionals’ Work. In ECSCW'99: Proceedings of the Sixth European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work. Kluwer Academic Publishers. 1999. p. 41-60

Author

Hertzum, Morten. / Six Roles of Documents in Professionals’ Work. ECSCW'99: Proceedings of the Sixth European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work. Kluwer Academic Publishers, 1999. pp. 41-60

Bibtex

@inproceedings{f039858ef72348a69048fa5289a09e8b,
title = "Six Roles of Documents in Professionals{\textquoteright} Work",
abstract = "Documents are used extensively by professionals in their execution of their own work and to share information with others. Professionals use and manage their documents in ways that are woven into their work activities and leave most of the context unsaid because the documents are understood as belonging to a certain ongoing activity. Contrary to this, organisations have a strong interest in storing information in less person-dependent ways than simply relying on their employees{\textquoteright} memory and personal files. To support document management effectively we need to balance the individual professionals{\textquoteright} focus on their current activities against the long-term interests of the organisation, and we need a fuller understanding of the affordances and constraints of documents. This study identifies six roles documents play in professionals{\textquoteright} work, namely that documents serve: (1) as personal work files, (2) as reminders of things to do, (3) to share information with some yet withhold it from others, (4) to convey meaning, (5) to generate new meaning, and (6) to mediate contacts among people. Painstakingly standardised and very time-consuming methods are required for documents to convey meaning but such efforts are rarely considered worthwhile compared to relying on other document roles or rework.",
author = "Morten Hertzum",
year = "1999",
language = "English",
pages = "41--60",
booktitle = "ECSCW'99: Proceedings of the Sixth European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work",
publisher = "Kluwer Academic Publishers",
address = "Netherlands",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Six Roles of Documents in Professionals’ Work

AU - Hertzum, Morten

PY - 1999

Y1 - 1999

N2 - Documents are used extensively by professionals in their execution of their own work and to share information with others. Professionals use and manage their documents in ways that are woven into their work activities and leave most of the context unsaid because the documents are understood as belonging to a certain ongoing activity. Contrary to this, organisations have a strong interest in storing information in less person-dependent ways than simply relying on their employees’ memory and personal files. To support document management effectively we need to balance the individual professionals’ focus on their current activities against the long-term interests of the organisation, and we need a fuller understanding of the affordances and constraints of documents. This study identifies six roles documents play in professionals’ work, namely that documents serve: (1) as personal work files, (2) as reminders of things to do, (3) to share information with some yet withhold it from others, (4) to convey meaning, (5) to generate new meaning, and (6) to mediate contacts among people. Painstakingly standardised and very time-consuming methods are required for documents to convey meaning but such efforts are rarely considered worthwhile compared to relying on other document roles or rework.

AB - Documents are used extensively by professionals in their execution of their own work and to share information with others. Professionals use and manage their documents in ways that are woven into their work activities and leave most of the context unsaid because the documents are understood as belonging to a certain ongoing activity. Contrary to this, organisations have a strong interest in storing information in less person-dependent ways than simply relying on their employees’ memory and personal files. To support document management effectively we need to balance the individual professionals’ focus on their current activities against the long-term interests of the organisation, and we need a fuller understanding of the affordances and constraints of documents. This study identifies six roles documents play in professionals’ work, namely that documents serve: (1) as personal work files, (2) as reminders of things to do, (3) to share information with some yet withhold it from others, (4) to convey meaning, (5) to generate new meaning, and (6) to mediate contacts among people. Painstakingly standardised and very time-consuming methods are required for documents to convey meaning but such efforts are rarely considered worthwhile compared to relying on other document roles or rework.

M3 - Article in proceedings

SP - 41

EP - 60

BT - ECSCW'99: Proceedings of the Sixth European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work

PB - Kluwer Academic Publishers

ER -

ID: 113113482