Document Metadata: What Is It and Why Is It Important?

This guide covers everything you need to know about metadata, why it's important for your business, and how it makes information management easier.

Brianna Valleskey Head of Marketing Table of Contents Loading table of contents.

A recent report shows managers lose 62% of their days on "work about work." For example, communicating with employees and clients, switching between apps, chasing status updates, managing shifting priorities, and searching for data and information.

Locating documents and finding information was cited as time-wasters by 58% of employees — taking up 3.6 hours of their workday (over 900 hours per year).

The stress and hassle of searching for the correct document data leave employees feeling burned out, impacting their productivity and retention. And it piles on more losses to your business from missing resources at critical times and draining your bottom line.

Smart financial institutions turn to document metadata to make information easier to find.

This guide covers everything you need to know about metadata, why it's important for your business, and how it makes information management easier.

What is document metadata?

Document metadata is structured, non-visual information embedded into a video file, web page, or another file format.

Document metadata is structured, non-visual information embedded into a video file, web page, or another file format. It describes and explains the characteristics of the data for easier sorting, routing, storage, and control.

This electronic fingerprint allows users in your organization to understand and track important work details. Plus, it offers more context for users as they search for information, classify documents, and mark them for internal or public use.

Metadata is often confused with master and reference data. But they differ in their functions and the type of data they hold:

Metadata is not the actual data, so it doesn't give raw access to anyone who accesses the document. For instance, you can know the summary details about a document, but it's just enough to understand what the file is about—but not enough to see its actual contents.

Specifically, metadata provides identifying information about the document, such as the:

In the financial industry, metadata helps with information exchange, particularly in transaction or report formats. Lenders possess, handle, and maintain a wealth of specific types of information on customer profiles, deposit and loan accounts, bank investments, corporate accounting, and market research.

To accommodate all this content, lending systems use distinct information formats:

For example, information on individual deposits or loans is usually numeric. Borrower signatures store in graphic formats. And market research may include textual, numeric, and sometimes graphic representations.

Some lenders use document management systems configured to handle file types like:

Others store this full range of file types on an internal (shared) network drive.

Types of document metadata

From a business perspective, users create metadata in the following distinct classes:

Other types of metadata include audio, process, environmental, and relational-database metadata.

The role of metadata in document management

A risk management professional reviews documents during an account opening or underwriting process.

The primary value of metadata lies in how it aligns with and supports your organization's goals and objectives. Your employees can't re-use or interpret data responsibly without it.

Here are some reasons metadata is an invaluable tool for lenders:

Standards and metadata: What to document about your data

To be effective, metadata must be understandable and precise. Otherwise, other users in your organization won't understand what it means. That's why you need a set of metadata standards for particular file formats to guide users on what metadata elements to expect in each document.

Here are some suggested metadata properties to document your data:

You can keep your document metadata records in a CSV file or spreadsheet for quick reference. And include additional information like codes, abbreviations, or acronyms needed to interpret the metadata as supporting documentation.

Document metadata best practices

Whenever you create a document, the metadata of that file is included but often hidden from end users during the process.

Whenever you create a document, the metadata of that file is included but often hidden from end users during the process.

External parties harvesting corporate information can be exceptionally damaging to your business. So it's critical to safeguard usernames, email addresses, and installed software packages from publicly available document metadata.

Hackers can use email addresses for targeted phishing attacks on employees or customers, compromising their devices, and leading to massive loss of sensitive company data. Your entire information system could become the target for further attacks, leading to even further damage to other systems within your corporate network.

To protect your company's documents from falling into the wrong hands, use a set of document metadata best practices. Otherwise, it'll be difficult to keep sensitive and confidential information away from prying eyes and criminals.

Use an accepted standard or authority list in the financial industry to retrieve and index your data, making management of business metadata easier.

Here are some of the most common document metadata best practices:

Streamline document management procedures with Inscribe

Many organizations still rely on paper-based processes. But that makes it harder for employees to find data, consumes more time, and lowers their productivity.

Remedying these inefficiencies requires streamlining document management procedures, which include implementing document metadata standards to manage the flow of documents across the organization.

With Inscribe, you can analyze your a document’s metadata and detect any suspicious behavior before it damages your brand.

Talk to an Inscribe expert today to find out how Inscribe can help with your formal document management procedures.