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From Paper to Cloud: A Step-by-Step Guide to Planning a Scanning Project

how to start a scanning project

Digitizing paper records is one of the most impactful operational upgrades a business can make. Whether you’re trying to eliminate filing cabinets, support hybrid work, improve compliance, or simply gain better control over your information, a well-planned document scanning project can transform the way your organization stores, retrieves, and shares data.

But successful digitization requires more than sending boxes to a scanning vendor. It demands careful planning, clear objectives, and a structured process that ensures your files are captured accurately, indexed properly, and delivered in a format that supports your long-term document management goals.

This step-by-step guide walks you through everything you need to know to plan a scanning project, from evaluating your current records to selecting a vendor and implementing cloud-based access.


Before diving into the steps, it’s helpful to understand why scanning projects are accelerating across industries.

Paper-based systems slow hybrid teams down and make collaboration difficult.

Regulations around privacy, retention, and audits require accurate, secure records management.

Filing cabinets and storage rooms consume valuable (and costly) square footage.

Paper is vulnerable to fire, water, mold, and theft. Digital files can be backed up and replicated instantly.

Employees and customers alike expect fast, digital access to information.

Digitization solves all these challenges, but only when executed through a clear, well-managed process.


Every scanning project begins with a clear understanding of what you want to achieve.

  • Why are we scanning? (Space, compliance, accessibility, workflow efficiency?)
  • Which departments are involved?
  • Are we scanning all documents or only certain types?
  • What is the timeline?
  • What is the desired end result—PDFs, searchable text, or a full cloud DMS?

  • Eliminating filing cabinets
  • Preparing for an EMR or DMS migration
  • Improving customer/patient service
  • Reducing search time
  • Supporting remote teams
  • Meeting compliance requirements

Clearly defining your objective will help you scope the project and prevent unnecessary costs.


Next, you’ll need to determine how much paper you have and in what condition.

  • Number of boxes
  • Types of documents
  • Average age of records
  • Document sizes (standard, legal, large-format)
  • Fragile or damaged materials
  • Stapled or bound records
  • Mixed media (photos, receipts, notebooks)

  • Banker’s box: ~2,000–2,500 pages
  • File cabinet drawer: ~2,500–3,000 pages
  • Linear foot: ~2,000 pages

A vendor will conduct a more detailed assessment, but knowing your approximate volume helps you budget and plan.


Indexing is the backbone of a successful scanning project. It determines how your digital files will be named, structured, and accessed.

  • Client/patient name
  • Account or case number
  • Invoice or PO number
  • Department
  • Date or year
  • Record type
  • Retention category

  • Folder-level indexing organizes entire folders as digital units—more cost-effective.
  • Document-level indexing names each document individually—ideal for workflows requiring detailed access.

The more detailed the indexing, the more labor-intensive (and costly) the project—so clarity here is crucial.


OCR (Optical Character Recognition) converts scanned images into searchable text.

  • Search by keyword or phrase
  • Improve research and retrieval
  • Support automated workflows
  • Enable text analytics
  • Make cloud-based archives far more usable

Most modern scanning projects include OCR because it significantly increases file utility.


Before scanning, determine what MUST be digitized based on retention laws or business needs.

  • Are any documents past their legal retention period?
  • Can certain records be securely shredded instead of scanned?
  • Are there industry-specific requirements?

  • Healthcare (HIPAA)
  • Financial services (FINRA, SEC)
  • Legal (litigation holds)
  • Education (FERPA)
  • Government and public sector

Scanning unnecessary documents will inflate costs, so this step often reduces your budget significantly.


Document preparation affects scanning time and cost. A vendor typically handles prep work, but you may want to:

  • Remove unnecessary duplicates
  • Separate documents that won’t be scanned
  • Organize folders for consistency
  • Label boxes for clear indexing
  • Identify sensitive or high-priority folders

This preparation ensures smoother workflows and fewer errors.


Selecting a qualified scanning partner is one of the most important steps.

  • HIPAA or SOC 2 compliance (if applicable)
  • Secure chain-of-custody tracking
  • High-speed, high-resolution scanners
  • Experience with your industry
  • Onsite and offsite scanning options
  • OCR and indexing expertise
  • Cloud delivery and DMS integration
  • Secure shredding or storage after scanning

  1. What security certifications do you hold?
  2. How do you track boxes and folders?
  3. How are digital files delivered?
  4. What is your typical turnaround time?
  5. Do you provide scan-on-demand during the project?
  6. What’s included in your pricing?

A reliable vendor will provide clarity and guidance at every stage.


Once scanning is complete, you need a place to store and access your files.

  • Version control
  • Workflow automation
  • Audit trails
  • Permission-based access
  • Retention management
  • Remote accessibility

Choosing your storage solution upfront ensures the scanning project aligns with your long-term goals.


Your vendor may provide:

  • Encrypted hard drives
  • Secure cloud uploads
  • Direct ingestion into your DMS or EMR
  • Database files with indexing metadata

If you are migrating to an EMR or DMS, ensure the vendor understands your system’s requirements for:

  • File formats
  • Folder structure
  • Naming conventions
  • Metadata fields

Poor planning here can create bottlenecks later.


Digitizing documents is only part of the process. Your team must adopt the new workflows.

  • User training
  • Documentation on naming conventions
  • Access controls
  • Retention policies
  • Cloud login instructions
  • Updated standard operating procedures

Without workflow adoption, scanned files will not deliver their full ROI.


To stay paper-light or paperless, you’ll need a plan for handling incoming documents.

  • Scan everything received after a specific date
  • Continue digitizing new documents weekly or monthly
  • Use integrated scanners for real-time capture
  • Pair scanning with scheduled shredding

This step prevents you from rebuilding paper backlogs.


Once digitized, most businesses choose to:

—if legally permissible.

—for records requiring long-term or permanent retention.

Your vendor will help you determine what must remain in physical form, based on your industry’s regulations.


A thoughtful digital transformation leads to:

Instant file retrieval and faster workflows.

Less office space and fewer storage costs.

Teams access documents anytime, from anywhere.

Auditable, organized, trackable digital archives.

Cloud backups protect you from loss or damage.

Easier to manage large volumes of data and growth.


Moving from paper to the cloud is one of the most powerful upgrades a business can make, but the success of a scanning project depends on planning. By evaluating your record inventory, defining your goals, selecting the right indexing structure, and choosing a qualified scanning partner, you can create a digital archive that is secure, organized, and fully accessible for years to come.

Emerald Document Imaging specializes in secure, end-to-end scanning services that help businesses in NYC, Long Island, and across New York transition seamlessly from paper-heavy operations to cloud-based efficiency.

Ready to start your scanning project? Reach out today →

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