RECORDS MANAGEMENT HANDBOOK

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
67
Document Creation Date: 
December 9, 2016
Document Release Date: 
April 24, 2001
Sequence Number: 
26
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 1, 1960
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4.pdf4.1 MB
Body: 
/&10 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 RECORDS MANAGEMENT HANDBOOK Managing Forms FORMS ANALYSIS Revised May 1960 GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION NATIONAL ARCHIVES AND RECORDS SERVICE OFFICE OF RECORDS MANAGEMENT FEDERAL STOCK NUMBER Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 7610-655-8220 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 RECORDS MANAGEMENT HANDBOOKS are developed by the National Archives and Records Service as technical guides to reducing and simplifying paperwork. RECORDS MANAGEMENT HANDBOOKS: Managing correspondence : Plain Letters- - - - - - - - - - - - 1955 47 p. Managing correspondence : Form Letters.. - - - - - - _ - - - 1954 33 p. Managing correspondence : Guide Letters _ - - - - - - - - - 1955 23 p. Managing forms: Forms Analysis----------------- 1959 62 p. Managing mail : Agency Mail Operations -- - - - - - - - - 1957 47 p. Managing current files: Protecting Vital Operating Records----------- ------------------- 1958 19 p. Managing noncurrent files: Applying Records Schedules ------------------------------------- M 1956 23 p. anaging noncurrent files: Federal Records Centers- 1954 25 p. Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 CONTENTS PAGE I. WHAT IS FORMS ANALYSIS? --------------------------------------------- 1 II. WHOSE JOB IS IT?------------------------------------------------------- 2 III. CHALLENGING THE NEED---------------------------------------------- 4 IV. READING THE FORM ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 13 V. WRITING THE FORM----------------------------------------------------- 20 VI. TRANSMITTING THE FORM --------------------------------------------- 36 VII. FILING THE FORM------------------------------------------------------- 42 VIII. IMPROVING PROCEDURES THROUGH FORMS ANALYSIS- - - - - - - - - - - - - - 46 IX. TOOLS FOR THE ANALYST---------------------------------------------- 51 CHECK LIST-------------------------------------------------------------- 62 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 I. WHAT IS FORMS ANALYSIS? In the Federal Government generally all of us want a form which can be smoothly integrated into daily operations and help advance those operations rather than hinder them. We want the form to provide accurate and dependable information, readily accessible in our records- information we can rely upon as a sound basis for forming policy, making decisions, and directing or coordinating operations. We want a form which will improve employee morale and create public goodwill. We want a form which will be economical in manpower, equipment, and printing costs for its preparation and use. This is what we want, but it is not what we always get. Instead, we often get forms that are hard to read and understand, difficult to fill in accurately, impossible to process quickly, uneconomical in size, and costly to print. Why does this happen? Because so many of us take the attitude that a form is unimportant. We fail to realize that a form is actually an out- line of a job to be done, a procedure in motion. We get effective forms only through forms analysis. Forms analysis is the means of determining WHAT should go on the form. It is a specialized kind of methods improvement or procedural simplification, its approach to such improvement and simplification being through the forms involved. When we analyze a form in the light of its related work routines, possibilities arise for benefits which go beyond the specific actions of entering information on the form or taking information from it in some prescribed sequence. Forms analysis thus is management analysis applied in the three following areas : ? NECESSITY OF INFORMATION The first important consideration is to question essentiality. Not all the information to be gath- ered always suits the service or process for which it is to be used. Sometimes different infor- mation would be more suitable and often less would be sufficient. Many times the procedure requiring the use of the information also may be unnecessary in whole or in part. These aspects of forms anal- ysis are covered in chapter III, Challenge the Need, and chapter VIII, Improving Pro- cedures Through Forms Analysis. ? PREPARING THE INFORMATION Analysis in this area is required to determine the best way of getting the information needed, the best method of minimizing error, the easiest way of entering information on the form, and the most convenient and economical method of sequencing it. In this handbook these aspects of forms analysis are covered in chap- ter IV, Reading the Form, and chapter V, Writing the Form. ? HANDLING THE INFORMATION Processing the information calls for determining what equipment and methods will do the work best. The information must flow between two or more points, and speed and accuracy of flow can be hastened or slowed down by the way the form is developed. The information must always be retrievable at low cost and rapidly. These aspects of forms analysis are treated in chapter VI, Transmitting the Form, and chapter VII, Filing the Form. Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP1T4-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 II. WHOSE JOB IS IT? The improvement of forms should be a coopera- tive effort of all those who create, fill in, use or otherwise handle forms. In practice, however, most improvements will come either from the office of the operating official who originates the form, or from a forms management analyst. The reasons for this are not far to seek. OPERATING OFFICIALS Most forms have their beginning in the office of an operating official. He is the one who knows how "his form" is used and how its use affects other operations in the office. If a form is to be revised, he is the one who must decide which change is best and approve the final revision. Operating officials, therefore, should know about useful methods of forms analysis and improvement. With this extra knowledge they should be able to "rough out" the content of a form that would meet the standards set forth in this handbook. It is natural for the operating supervisor or administrator to feel that his everyday operat- ing responsibilities are enough without worry- ing about the analysis and improvement of forms. A common reason given for delaying action on forms improvement is that operating problems take up all available time. What many officials fail to notice is that un- suitable forms, or the need for more forms, actually bring about many of those operating problems. For example, much of the corre- spondence in some offices is caused by forms which are not clear as to the entries desired or the action to be taken. The official himself frequently spends much of his time on work in- volved in correcting mistakes and clarifying misunderstandings caused by unsuitable forms. Just releasing his time for other work should be sufficient incentive to improve his forms without even considering the time released for his people. Then, too, some officials may not stop to consider that they are already studying forms just to keep them current with changing opera- tions and conditions. With just a little more study many changes could be developed into substantial improvements. This is not to imply that the operating official should qualify himself to be a forms manage- ment analyst. That is never his primary re- sponsibility. He should, however, be aware of the time he and his subordinates spend in studying forms to make changes and in handling operating problems caused by unsuitable forms or the need for forms. If the time spent is substantial, he should certainly be concerned with making his efforts more effective, even if it means spending a little more time temporarily. It usually is a matter of taking time to save time. FORMS ANALYSTS The magnitude of the forms problem has war- ranted the establishment of a forms manage- ment staff in many agencies and bureaus. This staff assists operating officials particularly. in the analysis of the more complex forms, and the ones which relate to others to establish a system. In many instances, the staff is able to suggest further improvements which the originator did not think of. Partly this is because many forms branch out beyond the originating office into other organizational elements for their preparation or use. Even in substantive pro- grams most of the forms are administrative in nature, where there are many similarities between organizational segments. The experi- ence of the forms analyst includes a knowledge of standard (Government-wide) forms as well as agencywide practices. The forms analyst can stand detached from the operating task and see vrocedural aspects which those closer to the operation may not see. Further, the analyst is in the best posi- tion to be a middleman between the originator and the users. Finally the forms analyst will usually be the forms designer, bringing the Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-FMP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 viewpoint of that technical specialty to bear on the matter. But despite its skill, it would be a mistake to assume that the whole burden of forms analysis could ever be shifted to any forms management staff. There can scarcely be a substitute for the firsthand knowledge of operating officials in determining WHAT goes on the form. CERTAIN ESSENTIALS The earlier an analyst is requested to participate in the development or revision of a form the more helpful. his recommendations will be. Too many times the originator brings his rough sketch to the forms analyst and says: "This form must be at the print shop by tomorrow night." The analyst can't do a good job in that time. It is the joint, cooperative effort of operating officials and forms analysts, during all phases of the development or revision of a form, which pays the greatest dividends in the improvement of forms and related procedures. Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RD074-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 III. CHALLENGING THE NEED Mr. "X" is a Division Chief. A change in the office procedure of one of his Branches requires that additional data be processed in that office. The Branch can get what it needs from 15 field offices of the agency. CHALLENGING THE NEED 1. Is the form needed enough to justify the work generated by its preparation and use? The first impulse of the Branch Chief is to believe that the easiest way to secure the infor- mation and use it is by a new form. He hastens to get a blank sheet of paper and rapidly starts writing questions. He writes questions because about 95 percent of all forms are a kind of questionnaire. He quickly decides he could use the answers to 20 questions. Put in forms language, he is talking about 20 spaces to be filled in. He determines, rather hurriedly, what should go on the form. He has become a forms origina- tor. But he has only started. He did not stop long enough to ask himself the right questions, nor did he take time to think through his replies. Or consider another situation. That same Branch has been using another form for three months. Three employees have told the Branch Chief the persons filling in item 17 apparently do not understand what is wanted. He has also been told by some of his staff that if two more facts were provided on the form, it would cut out "quite a few" letters for additional information and some teletype communications. The Branch Chief did what you would ex- pect. He decided to revise the form. He called for a copy of the form and with a few quick strokes of his pen he made the changes he wanted. But before Mr. "X", the Division Chief, approves the sketches of his Branch Chief and initiates a new form or revises one already in use he should get his subordinate to ask the six questions shown in figure 1. 2. Is each proposed item necessary? 3. Is each copy needed? 4. Can the form be combined with others? 5. Will the addition of another form, item, or copy simplify work? 6. Do the related procedures need revi- sion? CHALLENGE EACH FORM To determine the necessity for a form, we must find out if the work generated by its preparation and use is justified. First we must ask, "What would we do if we didn't have the form?" This question is designed to put the originator in a reasoning frame of mind. It will help to separate neces- sary information from that which would be just nice to know. It will force to the front other alternatives. One of them may be better than the proposed way. We can eliminate a form if: ? The information is not needed ? Another source is available ? The cost of the information exceeds its worth Information Not Needed One surprising lesson to be learned from study- ing forms is the number of times information is being recorded which serves no important pur- pose. Perhaps at one time the information was essential but, because of changing conditions, it is no longer needed. This is an age of rapid Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-FDP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 change. People originating forms, furthermore, are usually so busy with day-to-day operations that they have little time to examine their work objectively. Another Source Available Another surprising lesson from forms analysis is the number of times the same or similar information is being. recorded or reported at more than one point in an organization. When there is such duplication of information, usually the information needed can be obtained from another source, from forms, records, or reports being used for other purposes. This makes it possible to avoid creating a new form and the procedures related to it by relying upon information maintained elsewhere, by substituting a similar document or a copy of it which will serve the purpose, or by revis- ing another document to make it acceptable in lieu of the form under study. a re-evaluation and eliminate or reduce the in- formation it contains. In one agency, when the supervisor learned a form would cost $200,000 he decided it was not worth it.. In another agency a $75,000 cost changed the supervisor's mind. Of course, no one should attempt to cost every form, or the originator may find himself spending more time in costing than in develop- ing improvements. Costs should be computed only when there is some reason to doubt that the information is worth what it appears to cost on the basis of workload data collected during the fact finding. CHALLENGE EACH ITEM The next thing to do in challenging the need is to challenge each item on the form. We follow much the same process used in challeng- ing the entire form. "What would we do if we didn't have this item?" we ask first. Finding a better way to obtain the informa- tion will permit the elimination of the form. Perhaps mechanical methods for compiling the information would be better and more econom- ical than the manual procedures presently used. Perhaps the form can be eliminated, simply by using. a rubber stamp. Cost of Information Exceeds Worth Seldom is the full cost of a form realized until a price tag is placed on its preparation and use. In most cases the principal costs are labor costs-the man-hours required to gather infor- mation, fill in the form, summarize or extract information from the form, and perform all the other related clerical and administrative tasks. Frequently, costing a form has to be done item by item. When this is done, it identifies that part of the information which is more costly than the other parts. Although one can usually estimate what a form costs, a determination of its worth is usually pure subjective judgment. By putting a price tag on a form and discussing it with others, it may be found that the costs are much greater than anticipated. Just the act of bring- ing to light the total cost of the form may cause In one Government agency, a supervisor eliminated 4? man-months of punch card work per year by challenging the need for one item which called for entry of month, day, and year. The "day" entry was not needed. We can eliminate the item if: ? It collects information which is no longer needed ? There is a better source or way for obtaining the information ? The information it collects costs more than it is worth ? It can be combined with another item This challenging of items is an important part of forms improvement. It takes only a few minutes for each item, if a complete job of gathering the facts has been done. It is seldom that a form is subjected to a complete study without finding some items which can be eliminated or simplified. The work necessary to enter one item on one form may not be too time consuming. But when the form is completed hundreds or thou- sands of times the work required for one item may represent many man-hours of employee time. Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDF4-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 CHALLENGE EACH ITEM, EACH COPY TO THE MORTGAGEE: Your Credit Memo is attached. Please use FHA Case Number when making payment to Fee Appraiser. Th. appraiwl at the property desc,,b.d in the ortached application ha, been assigned Co you as an independent fee opproieer. Please complete he appraiwl on the prescribed FHA form within Ouse 131 days and send it to this once. Yoor lee for completion of on occeptobl. appraisal will be $20.00 which will be paid to yap by the Mortgagee. This form signed by you in th. right hand column will constil- your bill Co th. MoH- sos.. and should be ,tamed to FHA with the appwiwl. FHA will no. its rx. ipl of the appraisal on the form and sunward it ro the Modgage* as its outhoriy M disburse your fee hi you. If you canon accept the appraisal and complete it promptly, CHECK HERE ~y ^ nd lh cos. and balh copies of this form mmediately. D.M Approiral received by FHA and d o of oothoriaed FHA Employ.. PUBLIC VOUCHER FOR REFUNDS *A APPRAIS t D IGNA ION U.S. HOUSING NOME FINANCE NCY FEDEERLAL HOR IN G A MINISTTRATION? ffm Distribution of? apses. S (orsggW~Dall, 2 and 1 to FHA Comptroller, 4 and 5 tc Ft raiser w case, 6 to Mortgagee as an advance notice and No. 7 (last) inPHA Field ORrceTickler Pile. 'Seven Copies $Dt 158l rNra nipfrotle, Gore,bI; 18 items eliminat Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 Figure 2 shows how the Federal Housing Ad- ministration eliminated 18 items from an 8" x 10%" form, enabling FHA to redesign it to an 8" x 3 j2? form. By cutting the size, three forms could be printed on an 8" x 10'2" sheet, which further reduced by two-thirds the 250,000 times the form was inserted into the typewriter. Also, the number of copies was reduced from seven to three. CHALLENGE EACH COPY One of the biggest wastes in the paperwork of many organizations is the preparation of un- necessary copies of forms. Just the waste of paper and employee time in preparing these unneeded copies gives us reason enough to challenge each copy of every form. are being filed the division chief needs to be reminded that each filing cabinet, when full, represents $1,000 of clerical effort, $1,000 of time to open file drawers and insert a piece of paper in the right spot. COMBINE 'WHERE POSSIBLE There are at least three ways in which forms can be advantageously combined. They should be combined, of course, when they can be, for this is usually the great "pay off" area in forms analysis. We combine forms for: ? Standardization ? Telling the whole story ? Filling in at one writing More significant, however, is the time wasted by people who have to review copies which they did not need in the first place. Fre- quently these people are in responsible positions and can ill afford to spend time reviewing information they do not need. Then too, everyone hates to discard filled in forms, and they usually wind up in files, even when the need for them is not too clear. In this manner unneeded copies waste the time of file clerks, squander costly file cabinets, and usurp valuable office space. Each file cabinet whose purchase can be avoided will save at least 6 square feet of floor space and $60 or more in equipment cost. It takes only 12,000 copies of a form to fill an entire filing cabinet. Sometimes when copies go to A, B, and C, it will be found that one copy instead of three may suffice by having that copy go to C via A and via B. Sometimes three copies go to offices quite close to each other. They may be willing to cut out two copies once it has been decided where a single copy would be most accessible to all. Sometimes copies are required for successive administrative echelons-one for the unit, one for the section, one for the branch, and one for the division. A division chief in a case like this should be asked if this could indicate overlapping of functions. If all four copies Standardization Similar forms are often used for essentially the same purpose in different parts of an organiza- tion. By getting the people responsible for these forms in agreement the development of one form may replace the others. Examples of this kind of combining are so common with established forms programs that many can be given. Figure 3 is a typical case study. It comes from the Veterans Administration and shows how four request-for-information forms were combined. The task of the analyst here was to realize that despite differences in content, sequence and arrangement of items, methods used to obtain the information, and construc- tion of the forms-still in essence they were kin. Of course one benefit of this kind of com- bining is to reduce printing and stocking costs. Much more important, it brings about a selec- tion of the best procedure for processing the form, reduces the training time of employees reassigned between offices, and Simplifies direc- tion. Telling the `Whole Story A second way to combine is by consolidating forms used in successive work steps. This makes it possible to get the complete story on one sheet of paper. Frequently this avoids Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RtP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 MW STANDARDIZA Ti0 N VA Form 3101, November 1945, was a 4-part carbon-interleaved snapout set used for requests to the Army, Air Force, National Guard, Public Health Service, and State governments. A VA Form 3102 was a cut form used for requests to the Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard. "'Vure 3 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 the transcribing of information from one form to another. Even if transcribing is not eliminated, con- solidation is still helpful. For example, an agency formerly used one form to request the reproduction of printed material. The next step, a request for the distribution of the ma- terial to the recipients, required another form. Much of the information entered on the repro- duction request was also entered on the distri- bution request, so these two forms were replaced by a "Requisition for Reproduction and Distribution." Now this one form not only serves all purposes, but even better it also documents the whole continuous trans- action. It tells the whole story. "Telling the whole story" is portrayed further in the study made by the Department of Commerce. Eighteen different forms were used by the various bureaus within the Depart- ment to requisition different types of printing services including distribution and mailing. It was also learned that the billing information could be included on the requisition to elimi- nate additional paperwork. Figure 4 shows how the forms were combined and the proce- dure standardized. taxpayer and the taxable year, however, was the key information that was being entered. This could be entered at one typing. This reduced the 1,800,000 typings to 450,000. The advantages of combining forms in this way are increased clerical production, and de- creased printing and stocking costs. FILL FORM GAPS Improving a form does not always mean simpli- fying or eliminating forms, items, or copies. Some operating difficulties have their origin in the need for another form, for items that are missing from a specific form, or for an additional copy. So originators must be on the alert for any additions which will simplify work. The need for additions often turns up during discussions with people working with the form. The need for other additions may become obvious after examination of individually com- posed letters or narrative reports requesting recurring data, and directives or manual issuances. The best method of finding missing items is to examine completed copies of a form in the files. Filling In at One Writing The objective here is to get all information common to several forms into one writing operation. Usually this is accomplished by entering the common information on all forms, even though after they are filled in they are separated to serve different purposes and not all the information is needed at each location. The appointment of Federal employees is handled by one form, although the payroll office and the Civil Service Commission copies could contain less information than is on the "original" copy. Yet, one typing is better than three even if two of the copies contain more information than the recipients require. Figure 5 shows two form letters and two forms used by the Internal Revenue Service to process certain types of cases. Addressing these letters and forms required 1,800,000 initial typings. The name and address of the Analysts look for handwritten or typed notations for which space was not provided on the form. If the same basic notations appear repeatedly, chances are that the form should be revised to include space for such entries. A review of the procedure might reveal that by using an extra copy of the form unnecessary writing on the same form or possibly other forms can be eliminated. A few forms attempt to do too much. A form should be designed to do a special job, and when it attempts to do more, operations will bog down. Where this is so, two forms would be better than one. REVISING PROCEDURES By challenging the facts we can determine if the form or items on it should be eliminated or combined, if missing items should be added, if the number of copies for each preparation should be reduced or increased, and the best 9 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 Approved For Release 2001/07/17 : CIA-RDP74-00005R000100020026-4 TELLING THE WHOLE STORY 18 forms eliminated Types of services Distribution information Billing information '- OT r....e.r ? ~MININIO REQUISITION ?c? AREA WRITE lox SeHADED