There’s always something to howl about.

The quest for the paperless office: Scanning

If you want to build a paperless law office, then avoid the practice of criminal law. While other parts of the legal system are slowly, but surely, moving into an electronic and paperless future, all important documents in a criminal practice need to be produced in hardcopy form.

And so I do have to maintain and secure client files.

Still I’m finding ways to minimize the paper flow. My discoveries may make sense to you in your real estate business, so I’ll share them here from time to time.

Today: The scanner.

I need something that is fast, produces good quality scans (but need not reproduce the Mona Lisa in all its glory), and is inexpensive. Right now my firm is me. But later I expect to add a support person and additional attorneys.

So I want something that can be networked so that colleagues can share the scanner.

I think I’ve found a solution: The Fujitsu ScanSnap S1500. I got the S1500M – the “M” is for Mac. It’s roughly $400 from Amazon, although I bought mine slightly cheaper. For the $400, Fujitsu throws in the latest version of Acrobat Professional, which itself runs more than $250 retail.

I haven’t fully exploited Acrobat Professional, but I’m sure it’s got some features I could incorporate into my workflow.

But I have worked with the ScanSnap for the past two months, and it’s been nearly flawless. It’s fast – Fujitsu claims 20 pages a minute – and handles a pile of documents of all sizes, automatically adjusting the scanner to accommodate different sizes.

Very rarely the multi-document feeder jams on a document that’s folded or wrinkled. But fixing the jam is painless. Most of the time the scanner powers through like a champ. Just put the documents into the feeder, and press the scan button. The scanner handles the rest.

This is a color scanner, but I have not used it to scan in photos so couldn’t say whether the scan quality is good enough for anything but the most basic color scanning.

Best of all, the scanner is only 12 inches by 6 inches, so fits nicely on any desk. It’s by no means a portable scanner, but it is light and small enough that you can move it from place to place without much hassle.

I had the ScanSnap up and running within 5 minutes out of the box. The Fujitsu-supplied software is not refined. It runs in the background and detects the scanner in operation. The software also offers the ability to create profiles to automate the handling of documents.

The ScanSnap S1500 is a USB device, not a networked device. One solution: connect the device to a spare computer/server and share the Scanned Documents folder so that everyone in the office can reach his scans.

Another problem: the ScanSnap software has not been updated for the latest MacOS version, “Snow Leopard”. It crashes on the “Scan to Folder” feature, although there are workarounds for this bug. Fujitsu promises to have a fix out by the end of 2009, but that’s an absurdly long time to wait for a $400 product to integrate seamlessly with a major operating system like MacOS.

The ScanSnap 1500M doubles as an excellent copier by scanning in documents, and then printing. So if you need a scanner to handle workplace documents, that has a small physical footprint, is reasonably priced, and just works, then I’d recommend this product.

If you need something that’s somewhat less robust (and less expensive), try an earlier model: the ScanSnap S500 is the previous version of the S1500, and, while somewhat slower, is apparently also a very good product.

Finally: I get nothing, got nothing, and will never take anything for recommending a product or service on this blog. You’ll just get my thoughts about products or services that I have found valuable in my work, and think you might find useful as well.