In recent years, organizations ranging from health insurance firms to technology outfits have turned to paperless correspondence—paperless billing, paperless contracts, paperless receipts, and so on.
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. I write about green businesses and how to help startups succeed. Thanks to emerging paperless technologies, business owners can ...
The concept of a paperless office has been years in the making–nearly 41 to be exact. In the June 30, 1975 issue of BusinessWeek an article titled “The Office of the Future” started rounds of ...
Paperless office solutions reduce clutter, improve organization and streamline reporting. Here's how to create a paperless office.
You have no excuse for being buried under paper these days. The tools to digitize most or all of your pile are readily at hand and very affordable. We’re not exactly a paperless society yet, but this ...
More companies are giving customers the option of receiving bills, notices, and other paperwork electronically, as well as making payments over the Internet. In addition to saving trees, going ...
Nearly one-third of states still use electronic voting machines that produce no paper vote records, according to the latest federal survey of election technology nationwide. In addition, nearly 8 in ...
Remember the many hours you used to spend preparing and printing documents each week, only to watch them make their way from students’ desks to the floor, the trash bin or the bottom of their ...
The company launched as a solution to the outdated and often inaccessible nature of snail mail. But its latest product, a collection of 26 digital cards inspired by London’s Victoria and Albert Museum ...
For years, paperless voting machines have been characterized as an election security hazard. Without an auditable paper trail, security experts say vote tabulation runs the risk of producing results ...
Nigeria's federal government has achieved full digital compliance, marking the successful transition to a paperless civil ...