A local county council office employs multiple Line of Business (LOB) applications to manage its operations and services, including financial management, human resources, and citizen relationship management. However, using these systems creates multiple content issues, including siloed information stored differently in each application, making it difficult to share and access data across departments and case teams. The rise in duplicate information leads to inconsistencies and errors. Furthermore, a lack of standardization in different LOB applications is becoming increasingly expensive due to the explosive growth of electronic documents and no means to enforce retention periods and disposition rules on paper documents. It led to increased costs and widened the opportunity for legal problems. Maintaining the citizen’s records needed a solution for the county to enforce retention periods and designate certain documents as records. Accessing work documents from multiple siloed systems, inconsistent naming conventions and metadata standards, and limited search functionality make it difficult for the county council to manage and access the information they need effectively. The county office needs a solution that can provide a unified view of their information, regardless of where it is stored. This solution should allow for seamless access to documents, effective searching and retrieval, and the ability to manage documents across systems consistently and efficiently and enable the workers to refrain from using multiple LOB applications to complete their work in the source business application instead of switching between various applications to do their job. In addition, the new regulations and policies around, such as the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in the UK, make the county council office needs to comply with relevant laws and regulations and implement proper records management policies and procedures to protect the confidentiality and security of citizens' information and applying new approaches such as 'right to erase' and 'right to be forgotten' complying legal obligations and claims.