This document discusses 5 daunting problems in e-discovery: (1) rules and technology are always changing, (2) costs are variable, (3) technology-assisted review (TAR) is underutilized, (4) case analytics are primitive, and (5) e-discovery is transactional. It notes that while e-discovery has advanced significantly since the late 1990s, the industry still faces challenges due to a lack of standardization, complex technologies and methods, and a desire for best practices. The document argues that e-discovery must evolve from an ad-hoc, legal-focused process to a strategic, business-focused effort integrated with information management.
3. Discussion Overview
5 Daunting Problems in Ediscovery
» 5. Rules and Technology are Always Changing
» 4. Costs are Variable
» 3. TAR is Underutilized
» 2. Case Analytics Are Primitive
» 1. Ediscovery is Transactional
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4. 4
Daunting Problems in Ediscovery
In the late 1990s, ediscovery was in its infancy, as legal
and IT professionals began to confront production
challenges associated with computer data.
Today, look how far we have come. We now know
ediscovery is here to stay – but the industry faces
monstrous new challenges.
» The ediscovery marketplace is not unified or simple
» Technologies and methodologies are complex and varied
» Organizations yearn for best practices and proven technology
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#5: The Rules and Technology are Always
Changing
There is no rest for the ediscovery weary. Ediscovery
variables are in a constant state of flux.
» Data sources are increasing in number and complexity. IT professionals are
constantly evolving the format on which data can live and how it can be accessed
» The line between professional and personal is blurring. Companies are now
enacting “bring your own device” (BYOD) policies and social media platforms are
becoming commonplace.
» Big data is becoming bigger data. Ten years ago, a single custodian generated
hundreds of documents; today, it is not uncommon for a single custodian to
generate hundreds of thousands of documents. Also, the trend of “cheap storage”
enables organizations to keep larger volumes of data.
» Rules governing litigation across the globe are constantly evolving. With
differing types of legal systems, hundreds of countries and thousands of new laws
being enacted annually, the sands of ediscovery are constantly shifting.
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#4: Costs are Variable
In a world of shrinking budgets and growing ESI
volumes, ediscovery professionals must do more with
less. The ediscovery pricing landscape is defined by:
» Varying pricing models and amounts that have dramatically changed in the
last two decades. Nevertheless, everyone thinks ediscovery is still too expensive.
» Impossible price shopping. Despite best efforts to compare ediscovery providers
on a grid, it is difficult to conduct “apples to apples” comparisons.
» Frivolous litigation activities driven by cost-shifting arguments. Litigation is
often no longer about the merits of the case, but instead, lawyers are using costs
as a weapon to play “gotcha” with their opponents.
» Volatile ediscovery project parameters. Scope creep is commonplace, resulting
in ediscovery budget overruns.
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#3: TAR is Underutilized
Technology-assisted review is endorsed by courts and
will modernize review practices. But, lawyers remain
reticent to leverage this technology. Why?
» There is concern that TAR will replace the need for lawyers. Ediscovery
professionals must understand that TAR will let both machines and humans do
what they do best. Lawyers will still be involved in advocating for their clients,
establishing the review process and evaluating the outcomes.
» Legal teams are concerned about TAR defensibility. Though manual review is
burdensome and inconsistent, legal professionals still depend on the manual
method of review for most cases they encounter, citing defensibility concerns.
» More hands-on training is needed. There is a plethora of literature and CLES
available to teach ediscovery practitioners “what” TAR is, but training on “how” to
best leverage this technology is limited.
» The technology and best practices are not yet standardized. Standard
terminology and methodologies for conducting a review using TAR are still
emerging. Further, technology features across products vary drastically and
comparisons are complex.
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#3: TAR is Underutilized
By 2016, as predicted by analyst firm IDC, big data will
be a $24 billion market in 2016, rendering TAR all the
more important for parties seeking to stay afloat amidst
today’s sea of data. Lawyers must no longer run away!
Source: Worldwide Big Data Technology and Services 2012–2016 Forecast, IDC (Dec. 2012).
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#2: Case Analytics Are Primitive
Law firms and corporations are clamoring to understand
their ediscovery data across multiple cases. Ediscovery
professionals need more useful metrics to make better
decisions that result in litigation management efficiency.
» Volume analytics across cases
» Collection and preservation information from current and past ediscovery
projects
» Search metrics that identify key terms and concepts
» Production statistics that include the number of times a single document has
been produced and volume of production data per custodian
» E-mail analytics about a custodian’s social networks, time and date frequency
and top subject matters
» Spending totals per matter, per custodian, per file type and per location
» Records of archived or deleted data
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#2: Case Analytics Are Primitive
Gartner reports that most organizations today use a
reactive approach to the ediscovery process and
struggle to manage their archived documents.
» Metrics will provide the big picture view of an organization’s litigation
universe to maximize predictability, affordability and defensibility.
Source: Market Trends: Automated, Analytical Approaches Drive the Enterprise E-Discovery Software Market, 2013, GARTNER (Dec. 18, 2012).
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#1: Ediscovery is Transactional
The lifecycle of any innovation evolves from chaos to
standardization. How can organizations make
ediscovery practices more repeatable and predictable?
» Corporations and law firms must stop relying on manual processes. Today,
ediscovery practices are often invented and reinvented with each litigation matter.
» Consistent resources need to be dedicated to ediscovery tasks. As teams
become seasoned to collecting, reviewing and producing data, they will seek ways
to eliminate inefficiencies. There is a need for technology and process to work
together with ediscovery teams and programs.
» Organizations need better cooperation between legal and IT. The teams
responsible for ediscovery often function in a vacuum, managing information silos
with temporary bridges and connectors between them.
» Technology must be deployed to provide the backbone for process. Software
drives standardization. Ediscovery standardization will not exist until teams are
linked to consistent ediscovery and information management software platforms.
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All of these issues are symptoms of a larger problem:
an erratic, one-off approach to ediscovery
Ediscovery emerged in the legal space, but it
must evolve into a business-focused strategic
effort, tightly integrated with overall information
management practices and comprehensive
technology solutions.