When digitization slowly began to gain momentum in all areas of life in the 1990s, hybrid archiving was inevitable. Files were stored in paper form in folders and later banished to microfilm or microfiche to save space. The cost of digital storage was very high at the time and computer technology was not as powerful as it is today. During this transitional phase, people began to gradually digitize all files, documents, microfilm and other analog data storage devices. The process of digitizing analog documents when needed is called "scan-on-demand". The information was to be mobilized and made electronically available everywhere. This required heavy investment in IT infrastructure. At the same time, the question arose as to how to deal with machine-generated documents. People now began to archive in parallel: digital files on one data storage device and paper files in analog folders. But strictly speaking, this is not hybrid archiving, since it was not the same information that was archived in different ways, but different information in different ways. Redundancy is missing! Since the majority of information is now generated by machines (born digital), system-independent long-term archiving can only be carried out analogously through genuine hybrid archiving. The most reliable data carriers for this purpose are still microfilm, microfiche or paper. Since there are no starting materials for microfilm and microfiche that can also store color information, color printing on archival paper is the ideal solution. In combination with the miniaturization of documents based on microfilm, the space problem is also taken care of. Access to information is guaranteed with hybrid archiving even when access to digital files is no longer possible.