In-sourcing vs. Outsourcing eDiscovery & Litigation Support Good Idea or Bad?

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In-sourcing vs. Outsourcing eDiscovery & Litigation Support Good Idea or Bad?

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In-sourcing vs. Outsourcing eDiscovery & Litigation Support Good Idea or Bad?. Introduction. Today’s Panelists Bil Kellermann of Wilson Sonsini Mark Reichenbach of Proskauer Rose Danny Thankachan of Thompson & Knight Background on panel's Practice Support environments - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of In-sourcing vs. Outsourcing eDiscovery & Litigation Support Good Idea or Bad?

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In-sourcing vs. Outsourcing eDiscovery & Litigation

SupportGood Idea or Bad?

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Introduction

Today’s Panelists Bil Kellermann of Wilson Sonsini Mark Reichenbach of Proskauer Rose Danny Thankachan of Thompson & Knight

Background on panel's Practice Support environments Number of people in their department

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Scope of Discussion

Collection Processing Hosting Post-production litigation support

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PeopleTechnologyEvidence

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How to Decide

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Why In-Source?

Better service Better client value Cost containment Risk mitigation Efficiency Effectiveness Control

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Why not In-Source?

Processing limitations Handling exceptions Capacity Write offs Collection might be bad Recent rulings Investment Cost Barrier Cost-center budget

constraints

Shared-cost Shared risk – ringed

defense Learning curve and lack of

expertise Moore’s Law

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How to In-Source Effectively?

Scope of services Billing Buy in Internal Marketing Ease of engagement End-to-end AND point-source engagement

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Specific thoughts about each phase in the scope of discussion

Level of capacity Proper Infrastructure

Sequester data from firm Sequester data by client Redundancy & Backup

Staff Training & Certification CCE ACEDS

Do's and Don'ts

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Case StudiesUnderstanding the Variables

• Volumes– Processing Volume vs. – Hosting Volume vs. – Production Volume

• Volumes are not linear(!)

• Technical Complexity– Do we have the “know-how” to handle this kind of data?

• Deadlines

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Case Study 1“No Brainer”

Facts: A contract issue between businesses focused on legal issues.

Volume: “Low” The definition of “Low” volume is specific to your environment

Technical Complexity: “Low” MS Exchange/Outlook PST files, and MS Office documents

Deadlines: Usually pretty reasonable

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Case Study #2

Facts: Labor dispute where employee alleges harassment or discrimination.

Concerns: Proper preservation and collection of e-mail/workstations may be critical. (Outsource)

Volume: Low (5-10 custodians) [Not Walmart]

Technical Complexity: Low Deadlines: Reasonable

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Case Study #3

Facts: Oil & Gas contractual dispute Concerns: Often high value litigation Volume: Medium (20 – 30 custodians) Technical Complexity: Medium

Oil & Gas work includes handling of very large maps, well logs, complex engineering materials, and old/fragile paper documents

Deadlines: Reasonable longer lead times may be required due to the special

handling required which increases deadline pressure.

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Case Study #4

Facts: Patent litigation alleging infringement in source code

Concerns: High value / High complexity Volume: High (100+ GB to 1+ TB) Technical Complexity: Very High

Client environment is often UNIX, creating significant processing and production challenges.

Source code compressed sizes are tiny, but expand dramatically when extracted

Deadlines: Challenging

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Best Case Scenario Facts: Client is a third party to a litigation responding to subpoena. Judge

threatens sanctions and arrest, and imposes a 10 day production deadline. Very complex issue coding and privilege designations are required.

Challenge: Collect, review, and produce data from multiple custodians in 10 days. Steps:

Client IT extracted entire mailboxes for custodians and provided them on a rolling basis

Litigation Support processed and culled on date ranges and made available for review on a rolling basis

Review team of 12+ attorneys began relevance review within 48 hours, and completed privilege review within 6 [long] days.

Stats: 350K docs / 44GB collected, 27K docs reviewed, 4K docs produced Outcome: SUCCESS Success Factors:

Associates were experienced on the review platform Available resources / capacity Assistance of firm IT to handle technical surprises

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Worst Case Scenario

Surprises(!) Changing deadlines Increasing volumes Challenging data

Project Creep The ever growing case…

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Wrap Up

Dispelling Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt

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Q&A

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