• 09Nov

    Marcia Peacock published an article on CMS WIRE that commented upon the recently released Clearwell’s Top 5 eDiscovery Trends of 2010.

    Those Forecasted Trends of 2010 for eDiscovery were listed as: (1) Early case assessment, (2) Technology-Lead Initiatives, (3) eDiscovery gets project managed, (4) Data analytics set benchmarks, and (5) a single eDiscovery platform.

    To read more details about these trends, read Marcia Peacock’s full article.

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  • 19Oct

    As an organization develops, implements and improves its  business continuity and resilience strategies, more attention is being given to regulatory driven compliance requirements.

    There is also a concern to be addressed over the current political environment and the shift in the compliance landscape and compliance enforcement for which organizations need to be prepared.

    Such a scenario exists over the growing emphasis of compliance requirements focused on the field of e-discovery.

    Legal firms are certainly seeing the same dynamics and as a result, a new legal organization officially was formed and called “The Organization of Legal Professionals.”   The goal of this new group (OLP) is to promote standards and certification for e-discovery professionals and providers and ultimately “…provide the legal community with a means of assuring its clients that its e-discovery professionals possess the requisite level of competence and understanding of e-discovery principles.”

    You can read more about this in an article written by Robert J. Ambrogi that was posted on the legal.com blog watch by clicking here.

  • 06Oct

    In an article written by Greg Lawn for Computerworld magazine, the timely topic of e-discovery was addressed from a viewpoint of suggesting what to do to avoid a potential e-discovery disaster.  Because so many companies are now exposed to more regulations and compliance issues than ever before, every company should have an awareness of this issue as a regular agenda item in management meetings.

    While the processes to follow do not have to be overly complicated, those processes should reflect a best practices approach when being implemented into an organization.  Greg Lawn’s articles attempts to do that by listing the following major best practices to help an organization avoid such a disaster scenario:  (1) Talk to your company’s legal department regularly about e-discovery, (2) Make your information-handling practices routine and consistent, (3) Keep an audit trail of your activities, (4) Know who had the data under legal hold request and when, (5) Understand what spoliation is, (6) Be ready to preserve all data, and (7) Know what have and what you don’t have.

    Click here to read details for avoiding an e-discovery disaster.