Enterprise Content Management (ECM) technologies represent a critical intersection between organizational efficiency, environmental sustainability, and humanitarian capability enhancement. This article presents a comprehensive framework for assessing ECM’s dual contributions across corporate and non-governmental sectors. The environmental dimension quantifies ecological benefits through reduced paper consumption, decreased energy utilization, and minimized physical storage requirements, while establishing metrics for carbon footprint reduction in enterprise settings. Simultaneously, the humanitarian application dimension demonstrates how identical technological infrastructure enables improved knowledge retention, cross-border information sharing, and enhanced crisis response capabilities for non-governmental and humanitarian organizations. Case evidence from implementations across diverse organizational contexts reveals significant potential for ECM to address sustainability goals while enabling decentralized humanitarian operations through mobile accessibility and multilingual content management. The findings suggest an integrated approach to ECM implementation can yield substantial benefits for both corporate sustainability initiatives and humanitarian effectiveness, particularly in resource-constrained environments where information management presents unique challenges.
Keywords: Sustainability, carbon footprint, enterprise content management, humanitarian technology, knowledge sharin