@shlee3983
Thanks, @Gabriel_Watson for the tag. I've been out of practice for a few years now, but in my previous role, the company I worked for used Items as the Released data for production. The machinery we build was of a type that did not ever require a revision on a single part (mainly purchased components mounted on a house built frame), so this is how we structured things.
The Item was assigned to the Drawing, not the Inventor model or assembly. Lifecycle state changes and Revisions were all performed on the Item through the Vault Pro ECO process. I added watermarks to the drawing files, through Vault, that reflected the current State of those drawings, so that anyone trying to access them from Vault CLient or thin client would see the current state and whether or now they could be used for production. In Vault itself, the file revision didn't mean anything since the only drawing that could be used was the one attached to the Item. Drawing files in project explorer in Client would not have the watermark, and so could not be used for anything. We were not totally paperless, but we were going in that direction.
A lot of what I set up over the years there is documented in my old blog here. You may have to do some digging through articles to find the ones that are meaningful to you. EDIT: Looks like I did NOT ublish any articles on this topic... sorry!
Also, if you want to know more about ECO and Vault Revision blocks... try this class from AU2019.
There are a lot of correct ways to do this, it comes down to trying things (in a test environment if possible), and figuring out what process works best for you. We're always here to help as you go through this journey!