
Written by OpenKM on 10 july 2026
Contracts, invoices, files, emails, forms, reports, images, legal documentation, and administrative records are created and received by organizations every day.
The challenge is not simply to record information, but to determine how to find it, protect it, automate its processing, and keep it in a secure location. In this context, three terms are often used interchangeably: DMS, ECM, and Records Management.
They are more closely related than they may appear, but they are not identical. Choosing one of these technologies—or combining them within a single solution—can make the difference between basic document management and a comprehensive information governance strategy.
A Document Management System, or DMS, is a software application used to store, organize, search, share, and transfer files.
A DMS replaces fragmented folders, shared drives, and physical archives with organized information that users can access easily and that is securely backed up.
The core features of a DMS include:
Most document management tools also provide OCR, text extraction, integrations with other systems, and version control.
For many users, a DMS answers the most practical questions:
For many organizations, a DMS is the first step toward eliminating document disorder and improving day-to-day productivity.
Enterprise Content Management, or ECM, has a broader scope. It covers not only documents, but the entire lifecycle of enterprise content, including documents, records, emails, forms, images, workflows, shared content, and other digital information.
OpenKM defines ECM as a technology for capturing, managing, storing, preserving, and sharing information assets. ECM also brings together document management, records management, search, collaboration, workflows, data capture, digitization, electronic signatures, forms, and digital asset management.
ECM is therefore not simply a system for storing documents. Its purpose is to connect information, people, systems, and processes. The goal is to help organizations manage content strategically rather than treating it as a collection of isolated files.
The main difference lies in their scope.
In summary:
|
Business need |
Most suitable technology |
|
Organizing documents and controlling versions |
DMS |
|
Automating approvals and document workflows |
DMS / ECM |
|
Managing content across the entire organization |
ECM |
|
Applying retention and compliance policies |
ECM + Records Management |
|
Integrating documents with ERP, CRM, or BPM systems |
ECM |
|
Managing legal evidence and official records |
Records Management |
Records Management focuses on documents that have evidential, legal, administrative, or historical value.
Not every document is a record. An internal draft, for example, may simply be a working document. A signed agreement, an approved invoice, or a closed case file may become an official record.
OpenKM describes Records Management as the systematic and efficient control of the creation, receipt, maintenance, use, and disposal of records, including the capture and preservation of evidence relating to business activities and transactions.
OpenKM follows the ISO 15489 records management standard in its projects. This standard covers metadata, policies, controls, responsibilities, and the creation, capture, management, and monitoring of records.
Records Management addresses questions that go beyond the scope of a traditional DMS:
In OpenKM, the file plan makes it possible to define how content is organized after it is created or received, how its lifecycle is managed, which retention instructions apply, and how its final disposition is carried out.
Poor document management can lead to lost time, duplication, version control problems, approval delays, exposure to security breaches, and difficulties meeting regulatory requirements.
A DMS helps organizations improve document organization and productivity. An ECM extends those benefits across all corporate functions.
Records Management provides control, traceability, and evidence. In regulated organizations—including public administrations, healthcare providers, industrial companies, banks, legal firms, educational institutions, and large enterprises—this distinction is critical.
It is not enough to retrieve documents quickly. Organizations must also be able to demonstrate that information is authentic, complete, accessible, and managed in accordance with established policies.
OpenKM provides capabilities such as comprehensive auditing, version control, workflows, electronic signatures, OCR, automatic classification, REST and CMIS connections, support for protocols including CIFS, FTP, and WebDAV, and integrations with third-party applications.
Before adopting a particular technology, organizations should assess their level of document management maturity.
For example, if an organization only needs to manage files, control versions, and improve search, a DMS may be sufficient as a starting point.
If the organization needs to connect documents with processes, departments, and corporate systems, an ECM may be the more appropriate option.
Records Management should also be incorporated when there are legal compliance requirements, audits, document preservation obligations, official records, or retention and disposal policies.
The decision should take the following factors into account:
The goal is to transform information into a usable, secure, and properly governed asset.
A DMS helps organize documents and simplify everyday work.
An ECM enables organizations to manage enterprise content across all corporate functions.
Records Management ensures that critical information is preserved, protected, and disposed of in accordance with established policies and legal obligations.
In many cases, the best approach is a single, connected platform that combines all three capabilities.
OpenKM can help your organization overcome document chaos, automate existing processes, protect information, maintain a complete audit trail, and prepare its document management environment for future business growth.
Contact OpenKM to assess your organization’s current needs and discover how a DMS, ECM, and Records Management solution can help you operate more intelligently, efficiently, and in full compliance with applicable requirements.