Advanced Functions Enhance Content Management
At its heart, Box is a cloud-based content management and file-sharing platform that enables institutions to store, access and collaborate on just about any kind of document or file type, regardless of a user’s physical location. It supports many functions, such as secure file storage, real-time collaboration (with full integration with most other collaboration programs a university might be using), productivity tools, workflow automation and even agentic artificial intelligence.
Those functions are not difficult for administrators or users to learn. Administrators can pick up the most advanced features with a few days of training. Users probably need just a single session to learn how to work within their part of the platform.
SPECIFICATIONS
SOFTWARE TYPE: Cloud-based content management platform
DEPLOYMENT: Through Software as a Service or an appliance
FEATURES: Content collaboration, file sharing, storage, automation, e-signatures, metadata management
INTEGRATED SERVICES: 1,500 integrations, including ServiceNow, Salesforce, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure and Amazon Web Services
LICENSE: 50 users, annual recurring or perpetual
Almost all content-related tasks a user would need for their daily work can be accomplished within the Box interface. This includes content management, hosting collaboration meetings, adding e-signatures to documents and web publishing. Box also fully integrates with more than 1,500 platforms, which means content made outside of Box can be accessed, protected and edited within the platform.
Zero-Trust Solutions for Securing Digital Assets
Security is paramount in education, and Box provides that with a zero-trust environment that ensures users access only what they need for their work and only for the time they need it. All data is encrypted and secured, both in storage and during collaboration sessions. For the most part, this security is hidden from regular users. I never felt that the security features were hindering me from using the platform, and it should fit in easily with other security frameworks.
For my testing, I simulated three small workgroups set up in different locations. Each group was provided with a different set of standard office tools to mimic the variety that colleges or universities might be using across departments. I was pleasantly surprised to see how easily Box was able to tie all of those groups together.
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For example, even though one group used Microsoft Office 365 and another standardized on Google Workspace, they were easily able to read, edit and share content with one another natively using Box. All changes made by the groups could be saved, shared and synced using Box. I was able to set up workflows that automatically sent content from one group to another for collaboration or approval. Box’s fully functional e-signature module made for a streamlined approval process that should speed up content delivery at districts where everything requires permissions before deployment.
Regardless of how complex an institution’s IT environment or workflows are, Box can enable seamless collaboration and workforce automation. It can streamline the often laborious content creation process, save time and money, and deploy content more quickly than ever.
