How to Build a Paperless Office to Improve Document Storage in 2026
6 May. 2026
5 min read
By Christina Miranda
A paperless office can cut costs, improve efficiency, and reduce your carbon footprint. Learn how to digitize your office today.
Many businesses still rely heavily on paper, despite the cost.
The average office worker uses 10,000 sheets of paper per year, and up to 7.5% of all documents are lost.
On top of that, companies spend an estimated $20 in labor to file a document, $120 to find a misfiled one, and up to $220 to reproduce a lost document.
The solution is simpler than you could imagine: a paperless office.
A paperless office replaces paper-based systems with digital tools that improve how information is stored, accessed, and managed. Instead of dealing with filing cabinets, misplaced documents, and manual workflows, you can centralize your data and automate processes.
What is a Paperless Office?
A paperless office is a work environment that is hosted on software such as document management systems or ECMS.
The goal of a paperless office is to replace manual and paper-based processes with digital workflows.
Instead of storing files in cabinets, you would capture, store, and manage documents electronically, making them accessible from anywhere, at any time, and on any device.
Going paperless is more than scanning documents.
A paperless office involves transforming how information flows through your organization: paper documents are converted into digital files, manual approvals become automated workflows, and document storage shifts to centralized systems.
It is a step toward full digital transformation, improving how your business manages, accesses, and uses information.
What Are The Benefits of Having a Paperless Office?
Having a paperless office offers operational, financial, and environmental benefits.
One of the most important advantages is the ability to reduce your carbon footprint. After all, 40% of harvested wood goes to paper production.
Paper production consumes large amounts of water, energy, and trees, while printing and storage add further environmental costs. By digitizing documents and reducing reliance on paper, you can significantly lower waste and contribute to more sustainable operations.
Reduced spending on paper, printing, storage, and physical archiving. Paper storage could be costing you up to $7,000 per year.
Improved productivity
Employees spend less time searching for documents and more time on high-value work.
The average employee spends between 1-2 hours per day only searching for documents. And most of the time, lost documents have to be duplicated,
Better accessibility
Documents are available instantly, from any location. A strong DMS platform files and organizes your documents thanks to metadata tags and index fields, meaning you can pull up any document by using several simple keywords.
Enhanced security and compliance
Digital systems offer access controls, audit trails, and encryption.
Stronger collaboration
All teams and departments can work on the same documents in real time and avoid endless email chains where documents usually get lost.
Single source of truth
Centralized digital storage typically offers version control so you avoid accessing duplicate or outdated files.
Paper-based processes are slow, error-prone, and difficult to scale. Digitization removes these limitations and creates a more agile, efficient workplace.
How to Digitize Your Office Step-By-Step
Digitizing your office requires a structured approach. Simply scanning everything with no rhyme or reason will only lead you to digital chaos.
The goal is not just to scan documents, but to redesign workflows around digital processes.
You can build you process following these seven steps:
Step 1: Identify paper-heavy processes
Start by pinpointing where paper creates friction in your daily operations.
Focus on repetitive, document-intensive tasks like invoicing, contract management, employee onboarding, compliance documentation, and approvals.
Look for signs such as delayed processing times, lost documents, duplicate data entry, or reliance on physical storage. These are your highest-impact opportunities for digitization.
Use this free estimator to get a better sense of where you stand:
A successful transition requires buy-in across the organization.
Assign a small project team that includes decision-makers and representatives from key departments (e.g., finance, HR, operations). Clearly communicate the goals (cost savings, efficiency, compliance, and sustainability) and set expectations early.
Without alignment, adoption will be inconsistent and slow.
Step 3: Map current workflows
Break down how documents move from creation to storage.
Who creates them? Who reviews and approves them? Where are they stored?
This step helps uncover inefficiencies such as unnecessary handoffs, manual approvals, or duplicated work. Mapping workflows also makes it easier to redesign them into streamlined digital processes.
Step 4: Define your digital strategy
Before implementing any tools, establish clear standards for how documents will be managed.
This includes file naming conventions, folder structures, metadata/indexing rules, retention policies, and access permissions. A well-defined structure will help you achieve consistency and searchability, and prevents chaos as your digital repository grows.
You will also have to decide if you want a DMS for a more basic approach or if you need an ECM for advanced automation.
Step 5: Choose and implement a document management system
Deploy a centralized system to store and manage all documents.
This platform should support secure access, version control, indexing, and integration with your existing tools. A strong system becomes the backbone of your paperless office. It will be the one and only tool that make your documents easy to retrieve, share, and govern.
Make sure to have this step ready before you begin the actual digitization.
Most tools, such as Dokmee, offer capture and automated indexing so you can guarantee the process is done efficiently and at the cheapest price, with no redos.
Step 6: Digitize existing documents
Convert your physical records into digital files using high-quality scanning and OCR.
OCR is one of the most important technologies here, it makes documents searchable and usable, not just stored as images.
Prioritize active or frequently accessed documents first, then move to archival records. This phased approach prevents overwhelming your team.
Once documents are digitized, eliminate manual steps by introducing automation.
Set up workflows for approvals, notifications, routing, and document lifecycle management.
For example, invoices can be automatically routed for approval, contracts can trigger alerts for renewal dates, and HR documents can follow predefined onboarding flows. Automation reduces errors, speeds up processes, and ensures consistency across the organization.
Best Software For Your Paperless Office
Choosing the right software is critical to successfully becoming a paperless office.
Dokmee provides a comprehensive and scalable approach through its DMS and ECM platforms.
Dokmee offers both DMS and ECM solutions designed to handle the full document lifecycle:
Document capture and OCR to digitize paper records
Centralized storage with structured and automated indexing
Workflow automation to streamline approvals and processes
Advanced search and AI capabilities for faster information retrieval
Security and compliance tools to protect sensitive data
Powerful integrations to connect your current tool stack
Collaboration tools like editing and eSignatures
With features like AI Search and AI Document Summary, Dokmee goes beyond storage and implements advanced automation to help you analyze, summarize, and extract insights from documents in real time.
If you’re unsure where to start, Dokmee also provides a free ECM readiness tool that evaluates your current processes and identifies opportunities for digitization.
This helps will help you build a clear roadmap toward becoming fully paperless.
ECM Readiness Assessment
Evaluate your organization's document management maturity
Example of a Paperless Law Firm
Paperless offices can be applied to almost any industry, but law firms are one of the most impactful examples due to their heavy reliance on sensitive documentation.
In a traditional law firm, case files, contracts, and correspondence are stored in physical folders.
This creates challenges around storage space, document retrieval, and collaboration. A paperless law firm replaces these systems with digital solutions.
How can a paperless system impact a law firm?
Digital case files: All client documents are scanned and stored in a centralized system
Searchable contracts: Lawyers can instantly locate clauses, dates, or keywords
Automated workflows: Document approvals, reviews, and filings are routed digitally
Remote access: Attorneys can securely access files from court, home, or the office
eSignatures: Contracts are signed electronically, eliminating printing and mailing
For example, take a lawyer who is handling multiple cases. With a DMS, they can search for all documents related to a specific client in seconds.
Instead of manually reviewing each file, AI tools can summarize contracts and highlight key terms such as expiration dates or obligations. Billing and compliance tracking also become more accurate through automated systems.
Is This Your Sign To Go Paperless?
Yes, it is.
A paperless office is much more than an efficiency upgrade, it’s a competitive necessity.
By digitizing documents, implementing the right software, and adopting AI-powered tools, organizations can reduce costs, improve productivity, and significantly lower their environmental impact while preparing for the future of work.
Take the ECM readiness test above to see if you’re ready for it, and contact the Dokmee team for more information and guidance.
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