Must see articles for the week of September 29;
Analysis Paralysis: Realistically Assessing Your eDiscovery Needs by Chris DiMarco. Choosing the best eDiscovery technology for your organization can be a daunting task and requires an institutional, strategic assessment of your workload, process, and human resources. DiMarco provides a common-sense description of the major issues to consider when looking at technology options. This article pairs well with my earlier post on the same subject; Inside Focus: What Factors Impact eDiscovery Technology Decision-making?
Law Firms Facing Disruptive Changes Impacting eDiscovery Legal Services by Andrew Bartholomew. I think that it is always fascinating to read/hear about the health of the broader legal services industry and how eDiscovery is impacting (or has been impacted) by larger market conditions. Most eDiscovery professionals have been effected by the changing relationship between clients and counsel and emerging demands for greater efficiency and cost consciousness. Exterro’s article questions three lawyers who are deeply involved in their firm’s eDiscovery offering and who describe both how firms can develop evolved best practices and where the industry may be headed.
Corporate Counsel Identify Significant Improvement when Evaluating-E-Discovery Effectiveness. This brief synopsis of the findings from BDO’s Inside eDiscovery Survey provides a window into the practice of corporate counsel and how they are managing eDiscovery within their organizations. The survey polls in-house counsel on issues related to technology, data privacy, social networking data, cost efficiency and institutional eDiscovery progressiveness.
Comments
You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.