Archive for the ‘Guidance Software’ Category

Sandisk Fails to Find Proper E-Discovery Balance – Gets Sanctioned

Monday, September 20th, 2010

In the Southern District of New York it”s easy to get eclipsed (in the electronic discovery world at least) by the Honorable Shira A. Scheindlin (of Zubulake fame). And yet, the latest case out of this district was penned by Magistrate Judge William H. Pauley and contains one of the most memorable preambles to a case that I”ve read in a while:

“Electronic discovery requires litigants to scour disparate data storage mediums and formats for potentially relevant documents. That undertaking involves dueling considerations: thoroughness and cost. This motion illustrated the perils of failing to strike the proper balance.”

In Harkabi v. Sandisk Corp., 08 Civ. 8203 (WHP) (S.D.N.Y. Aug, 23, 2010), aside from the stellar opening, Magistrate Pauley illustrates that the culpability standard for certain technology companies may actually be higher than for their low tech counterparts. The discovery dispute began after the plaintiffs claimed that the defendant Sandisk failed to produce their former laptops and corporate email. When the underlying action (for failure to pay the plaintiffs their “earn outs” after an acquisition) began to heat up the plaintiffs wisely sent Sandisk a preservation letter.

Sandisk, upon the receipt of the letter sent a “Do-Not-Destroy” memorandum as well as securing the laptops issued to plaintiffs. After some time, the laptops were imaged and the data was saved on a file server. Unfortunately, this is where things took a turn for the worse.

After plaintiffs” evaluation of Sandisk’s production, it was discovered that materials from their laptops had not been produced and neither had some of their emails. After a significant amount of wrangling and Sandisk”s “best efforts” they admitted that they couldn’t find the laptop data anywhere — finally conceding that the laptop images were lost sometime during the data transfer. Because Sandisk did not “engage this reality” they didn’t commence a search of backup tapes for some considerable time. So, although the court was confident that the omission would eventually be resolved, the event might have never been detected but for the plaintiff’s diligence and in the final analysis it still ended up costing plaintiff considerable sums ferreting out the issue.

With this as a backdrop the Magistrate began his analysis of the spoliation and delayed production issues. The plaintiffs proffered four arguments for why a culpable state of mind could be inferred:

  1. A one month delay in counsel’s issuance of the legal hold memo. This argument was rejected by the court since the delay didn’t appear to cause any real harm.
  2. Failure of Sandisk’s counsel to adequately supervise the legal hold process. Here, the court concluded that counsel was “notably absent at critical junctures” of the preservation process, including the copying of the laptop data.
  3. Sandisk’s “expertise in electronic data storage.” Here the court appeared to hold Sandisk to a higher standard, noting that this finding “must mortify [Sandisk], a global business that champions itself a leader in electronic data storage.” The court further gilded the lily by stating that SanDisk”s “size and cutting edge technology raises an expectation of competence in maintaining its own electronic records.”
  4. Sandisk”s delay in revealing that certain information had not been included in its native production. Here the court also found some lack for forthrightness during counsel’s representations about discovery completeness.

Not surprisingly, with adverse findings on three of the above arguments, the court found defendant was “at a minimum” negligent stating that the “cascade of errors” ultimately aggregated to a “significant discovery failure.”

With these findings in the record the court then went on to the sanctions analysis. Here, there wasn’t enough evidence supporting terminating sanctions, but an adverse inference instruction was appropriate since the plaintiffs had “lost access to relevant evidence.”

Turning to the delayed production, the court found that because it appeared that the emails would eventually be produced, the prejudice “is contained.” Thus, terminating sanctions were not warranted. Yet, because defendant’s misrepresentations obscured the deficiencies and “stopped discovery in its tracks” the court found that monetary sanctions in the amount of $150,000 were appropriate to compensate plaintiffs for their “‘David-and Goliath-like” struggle for electronic discovery.”

Many of these errors are fairly typical of the types of e discovery disputes seen today. However, this case does seem to highlight the raised bar for any company that should “know better” when it comes to electronic discovery issues. Here, Sandisk certainly isn’t an e-discovery company per se, but their expertise in ESI storage certainly made it difficult to claim ignorance. This raised bar was seen in spades when Guidance Software was recently accused of gross negligence and e-discovery bad faith during an employment dispute. In combination with the Sandisk case, it’s not surprising to see the standard of care elevated for folks who should really know better. So, for anyone in the e-discovery (or tangentially related) industry, it’s probably a good idea to become even more diligent when responding to electronic discovery requests.

Clearwell Extends Its E-Discovery Platform With New Module For Identification And Collection Of Electronically Stored Information (ESI)

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

Yesterday, Clearwell announced a new module for identification and collection, which is available with Version 6 of its e-discovery platform. This sits alongside the existing modules for processing/analysis and review/production, extending Clearwell’s capabilities upstream to a part of the e-discovery process typically done by IT. The new module has already been purchased by GlaxoSmithKline, Nisource, and several other enterprises and government agencies, and the initial response has been incredibly positive. I wanted to say a few words about what led Clearwell to add the Identification and Collection Module, and how it’s different from other solutions.

Over the past few years, I have seen a transformation of the e-discovery software market. Previously, there were no specific people within corporations or government agencies dedicated to e discovery, and no formal budget was allocated to it. As a result, purchase decisions were typically made at the departmental level by legal or information security people who could “find the money” by borrowing from other projects. In stark contrast to that, today most major corporations have people specifically responsible for electronic discovery, and many of them have company-wide initiatives to lower costs by bringing e-discovery in-house. Companies are issuing more and more formal RFPs; performing proof-of-concepts as part of the evaluation process; and creating committees of both legal and IT to make purchase decisions.

Some vendors have sought to play up a “gap” between legal and IT teams when it comes to e-discovery. They manufacture survey information claiming that collaboration and communication between legal and IT is decreasing. Our experience has been exactly the opposite. At corporations like Coca Cola, Home Depot, and hundreds of others, we find close, collaborative relationships between legal teams and the IT professionals dedicated to help them. There’s now a new career path, sometimes called “legal IT” or “e-discovery manager”, for technically savvy IT folks who understand legal’s requirements. I was happy to see at LegalTech this year that legal professionals would often come by our booth with a colleague and say to us, “I brought my IT guy with me because I want him to see this”.

It is precisely because legal and IT are working so closely together that they want a single product to manage all their e-discovery activity. That’s what led us to add the Identification and Collection Module.

Why is offering a single product for everything from identification through production such a big deal? Clearwell’s approach offers two main advantages over alternative solutions. First, like earlier versions of Clearwell, the Identification and Collection Module is very easy to use – so much so that, with IT’s permission, legal could even manage the collection process itself. For example, existing products like Guidance Encase require users to write scripts to create filters for targeted collections; with Clearwell, everything is point-and-click through a simple web UI. That makes identification and collection accessible to non-technical users.

Second, because identification, collection, processing, early case assessment, review and production can now all be done using a single product, Clearwell is able to provide end-to-end reporting through the entire e-discovery life-cycle. For example, Autonomy’s disparate e-discovery products (Introspect, Aungate, etc.) require multiple log-ins, all have different UIs, and different data models. With Clearwell, all of these are the same, giving you complete control over your data – at significantly lower total cost of ownership.

You can sign up for a product demonstration or even evaluate the product for free. Take a look – and leave a comment to let us know what you think.

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Can AccessData Halt Summation’s Death Spiral in Electronic Discovery?

Wednesday, August 11th, 2010

When I first started working in the electronic discovery industry, I quickly learned two things about Summation: it has a huge installed base of law firm customers, and they all dislike using Summation’s products. It was feedback from these unhappy customers that led companies like Clearwell and kCura/Relativity to enter the review market, and the results are plain to see. While Clearwell and kCura/Relativity are both growing rapidly, Summation has suffered years of declining revenue.

Several people have pointed to poor marketing as the problem, and it’s true most customers are confused. Summation’s products all have different names (iBlaze, Discovery Cracker, CaseVault, CaseVantage), and it is unclear how they relate to one another. But the problem is more fundamental than just marketing. There has been no innovation from Summation for years; its products are difficult to use; and, they don’t integrate with each other. So, naturally, customers switch to more compelling solutions, revenue declines, management cuts costs, talented people leave, service levels deteriorate, more customers defect, and the cycle repeats.

As the management teams at Silicon Graphics, Siebel, or Yahoo! can tell you, once a technology company faces this death spiral, it’s very, very hard to turn things around. But that’s exactly what AccessData must do for its recent acquisition of Summation to work.

On the face of it, you would not expect AccessData to be capable of addressing Summation’s problems. As the #2 player in the forensics market to Guidance Software, it has no experience in legal review. Its customers are enterprises and government agencies, not law firms or litigation support service providers. Its headquarters is in Lindon (Utah), whereas Summation based is in San Francisco. But AccessData has a capable team, and must have some plan in mind. What is it likely to do? My guess is as follows:

  • Claim “end-to-end” in the enterprise market: AccessData will likely bundle the iBlaze review platform with its own forensic collection products (FTK) and claim end-to-end coverage of the EDRM model. The products obviously don’t integrate with one another, or even have the same UI, but some customers may not realize how important that is until after they have purchased. This is the same strategy used by Autonomy, which also puts together disparate products (Aungate, Introspect, etc.) and markets them as an integrated package.
  • Promote CaseVault and CaseVantage in the law firm market: These hosted review platforms are not widely used. AccessData will be hoping that with better marketing and sales execution, it can drive adoption of them by law firms and litigation support service providers. But most providers today seem pretty happy with Clearwell and/or kCura Relativity, so it’s unclear why they would switch away to CaseVault / CaseVantage.
  • Cut costs: On the day the acquisition closed last month, AccessData fired most of Summation’s engineers. That’s understandable, given the shrinking revenue. But it only accelerates the death spiral. With no engineers, it’s impossible to innovate or improve the products.
  • Sunset iBlaze product lines: This sounds radical since, according to Katey Wood at the451 Group, iBlaze accounts for 70% of Summation’s revenue. But AccessData may decide to focus its development efforts on CaseVault and CaseVantage, ceasing all investment in iBlaze. Effectively, this means it would “milk” the law firms using iBlaze, and pitch enterprises a product with no real roadmap for improvement. Given how far iBlaze has fallen behind, there is a strong argument that further investments are probably just throwing good money after bad.

It will take a few months before we can say for sure whether these, or other, changes will make any difference. If the experience of other companies is any guide, they may slow the decline for a while, but not reverse it. After all, there may be some people out there using Silicon Graphics computers to access their Siebel CRM systems or search the web on Yahoo, just like there will be some using Summation’s products for document review. But there are fewer and fewer every day.

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Cutting Through The Confusion: A Buyer’s Guide To Electronic Discovery Software

Sunday, April 19th, 2009

Over the past 4 years, I have had hundreds of conversations with corporate counsel and “legal IT”, meaning technical folks charged with supporting the legal team. More and more of them are looking to lower their costs by bringing e-discovery in-house. But as they work through that process, there’s one question that consistently comes up, even today – namely, “When [insert name of software company] says they “do” e-discovery, what exactly does that mean?”

There has been progress towards answering this question, thanks mainly to the analyst community. George Socha and Tom Gelbmann’s EDRM framework has been immensely helpful in breaking down electronic discovery into its component steps. Other analysts, like Debra Logan at Gartner, were quick to embrace the framework, prompting every software provider to follow suit. As a result, there is today a common language that everyone uses to describe the e-discovery process.

The Electronic Discovery Reference Model (EDRM) breaks down the e-discovery process into a series of steps. Companies looking to buy e-discovery software to lower costs typically map different software products to each of these steps, to make sure that they cover the entire process.
The Electronic Discovery Reference Model (EDRM) breaks down the e-discovery process into a series of steps. Companies looking to buy e-discovery software to lower costs typically map different software products to each of these steps, to make sure that they cover the entire process.

But having a universally-agreed framework is only half the answer. To eliminate customer confusion, there also needs to be agreement on how different software products fit into the framework. This is especially important since there is no single, end-to-end solution for e-discovery which covers all aspects of EDRM. So customers are forced to think about how different software solutions fit together. And that is where things begin to fall apart.

Many software vendors feel it is advantageous to claim that they do everything, even though they do not. Customers are rightly suspicious of those claims, and so press vendors to provide more detailed information – hence the question, “when you say you do e-discovery, what exactly does that mean?”

In light of that, how can litigation support teams, corporate counsel, or legal IT people figure out which e-discovery solution best meets their needs? From observing this decision-making process hundreds of times, I have found 3 simple steps are incredibly helpful.

Step 1: Read the analyst reports

Two reports in particular make for required reading. One is Gartner’s MarketScope Report, which is available for free at certain sites; the other is the 451Group’s recent e-discovery report, which is summarized in a publicly available presentation. The helpful thing about the 451 Group’s report is that it tells you which software companies do which parts of the EDRM process. You do have to buy the report to get the full picture (it’s well worth it!), but the publicly available presentation will give you a flavor for their analyis, and I have drawn from that presentation in the figure below:

Analyst firms like the 451 Group map software vendors to the EDRM framework according to what they actually do, which is often different from what software vendors claim they do.
Analyst firms like the 451 Group map software vendors to the EDRM framework according to what they actually do, which is often different from what software vendors claim they do.

The 451 Group’s analysis highlights several important points. First, it shows that there is no single end-to-end solution. Even the products of giants like EMC (SourceOne), HP (IAP), and IBM (CommonStore) only solve one piece of the puzzle, information management. Second, it shows that customers have choices at each stage of the EDRM process. For example, to solve the problem of identification, collection, and preservation of electronic information, customers can choose from solutions as diverse as Guidance EnCase (forensic collection), Index Engines (back-up tapes) and Mimosa NearPoint (email archive). Third, it provides an independent assessment of what vendors do, as opposed to what they may claim. For example, Kazeon claims analysis and review capabilities, whereas the report shows its product does identification, collection, and preservation; Recommind claims its Axcelerate eDiscovery and MindServer products do processing, whereas the report finds that they do not.

Step 2: Evaluate the products prior to purchase

Just as anyone would test-drive a car prior to purchase, it’s critical to test-drive e-discovery software. Any vendor should be willing to provide their software free of charge for an evaluation on-premise. The most effective evaluations are when the customer uses the product themselves, either on a live case or test data. This is far preferable to just sending the data to the vendor who then loads it into their system, as in that scenario there are too many opportunities for the vendor to hide their product’s shortcomings.

Step 3: Check references carefully

The trick with references is to insist on relevant references. It’s not good enough for the vendor to dredge up some random person who says nice things; or even a credible knowledgeable person who is using the product in a completely different way. For example, if a company is happy with Autonomy’s IDOL for enterprise search, that does not tell you much about what Autonomy might be like for e-discovery. What really counts are references from other customers who are using the product for the same application that you are.

All this can sound like a lot of work, but I have seen people go through the process in as little as a month, and be much happier for it. A little work up front can save a lot of time (and heart-ache!) later on.

Guide us in Electronic Discovery, O Guidance

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

It’s been a little over a month since the news first broke that Guidance Software was the frog in an electronic discovery kettle whose water had just reached the boiling point, with the arbitrator in an employment case demanding, “I want this game-playing stopped.” We thought that, with a little time between the initial story and now, it would be worth taking a step back and looking at possible lessons learned — not so much for Guidance specifically, but for enterprises who find themselves in similar situations, as well as the electronic discovery community that serves them.

First, a quick summary. Based on published accounts, it seems like a classic discovery situation (that’s just plain old discovery, without the “e”): a party is sued and fails to produce a document that, lo and behold, surfaces via some other source, throwing the integrity of the sued party into question. After all, if one potentially incriminating document wasn’t discovered, then who knows what else could be out there?

Guidance contended that it did everything that was required of it, and that it didn’t have (or couldn’t find, despite good faith efforts) the emails in question. But, of course, that didn’t stop the litigation support community (via forums such as the Litigation Support List) from pouncing on the perceived hypocrisy.

After all, how could a leading, publically-traded electronic discovery company get caught up in such a mess? How could their cutting-edge electronic discovery technology not have saved them? Or their (hopefully) best-in-class internal electronic discovery processes? If the electronic discovery companies don’t have their acts together, what about all the other poor souls who lack their knowledge and expertise?

That last question is a scary one, particularly given today’s environment, and it’s why the situation has stirred up so much chatter out in the electronic discovery blogosphere. Almost without exception, commenters have jumped to one of two conclusions. Either (a) Guidance has not followed proper e-discovery best practices, or (b) Guidance has willfully chosen to hide relevant documents that it could have produced, because they would be detrimental to its case.

Let’s explore each of those conclusions in a little more detail.

First, is there any direct evidence that Guidance did not follow electronic discovery best practices? The answer there is murky. Certainly, from Guidance’s perspective, the answer is a resounding “no”. They continue to claim that the emails that were produced from another source did not exist on the various laptops, desktops, and servers that were part of the initial discovery request, and it is certainly possible that that is true. Perhaps Guidance had a 1-year retention policy for emails, and the emails in question were outside of that policy. Perhaps the individuals involved had legitimately deleted the emails in question prior to receiving a litigation hold notice, without thinking that they would ever be relevant to a legal matter. Certainly an independent observer has grounds for incredulity here, but it does not necessarily follow that Guidance did not follow electronic discovery best practices for a company of their size and resources. Certainly, from the reports, they did not exactly act in a way that earned much confidence from or favor with the arbitrator. However, that’s a completely different issue, and one which may be a legitimate tactical decision by Guidance (to avoid, for example, the high cost of recovering the corrupt backup tapes).

Second, what if Guidance willfully chose to hide relevant documents? At this point, there is no evidence that this is the case. And, you would think that of all of the companies out there, Guidance would be keenly aware of the extremely high level of risk associated with this strategy. A company well-versed in computer forensics understands keenly that the odds of any potentially negative emails not being out there, somewhere, in cyberspace are incredibly small. Thus there is little incentive to intentionally hide documents. If, however, a company did make such a perilous and unethical decision, it has nothing to do with a lack of e-discovery best practices or technology: it simply has to do with a lack of ethics.

So, has the coverage of the Guidance situation been nothing more than an electronic discovery witch hunt? Far from it… even if both of the “conventional wisdom” conclusions are in fact wrong.

Why? Because even if Guidance has its electronic discovery house in order and is acting with complete integrity, if there’s one thing that anyone in the electronic discovery business should have taken away from the last 5 years of court rulings, it’s that perception and transparency in electronic discovery is everything. Electronic discovery is technically complex and fraught with challenges, and companies – particularly those who are perceived as having vast expertise in the space, whether as vendors (i.e. Guidance) or institutions (i.e. pick your favorite TARP recipient) – have to act in such a way as to appear spotless before the court of law and the court of public opinion.

Assuming you already have your electronic discovery house in relative order (a baseline, fundamental requirement for doing business today), perhaps the most important take-away from Guidance is how carefully you need to consider how minor electronic discovery slip-ups, whether real or perceived, can bite, big time. The legal and media environment is primed to pounce on any hint of a cover-up or conspiracy, and enterprises must go the extra mile (or two, or three…) to ensure that their e-discovery efforts are, and will be perceived, as upright, ethical, and above reproach – or be ready and willing to pay the price in sanctions or loss of public confidence.

Guidance Rejects Access Data’s $104 million Acquisition Offer

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

To the casual observer, it is surprising that a small private company (AccessData) could even think of acquiring a larger, public one (Guidance Software). But that’s exactly what AccessData publicly proposed to Guidance’s shareholders on November 6, after Guidance’s board had rejected its offer of $4.50 per share.

Leaving aside the personalities involved, and the history of bitter rivalry between these two companies, it’s easy to see why Guidance’s board rejected the offer. First, it’s only a 19% premium over Guidance’s share price on October 6, the date that the offer was made. Second, given 23 million shares outstanding, AccessData is offering a total price of just over $100 million for a company with $90 million in revenue and about $25 million in cash. Compare that to other e-discovery acquisitions, such as FTI’s $88 million purchase of Attenex or Iron Mountain’s $158 million deal for Stratify, each of which only had about 30% of Guidance’s revenue, and you cannot help feeling that the price is very low. Third, there’s the question of where AccessData will come up with the money. It’s hard to believe they happen to have $100 million in cash lying around and, with the recent market meltdown, debt is much less of an option than it used to be.

Still, this is not necessarily bad news for Guidance Software. Since its IPO in October 2006, the stock has fallen from a high of $17 per share to a low of $2 per share. The public markets are very unforgiving to small software companies. Guidance has recently made some bold moves, announcing usage-based pricing for its e-discovery product and several notable customer wins, but nothing has moved the stock. So an acquisition offer may be just the ticket to boost the share price, especially if it encourages other, more attractive acquirers to throw their hats into the ring.

Stay tuned, this might get interesting.

Gartner Publishes eDiscovery MarketScope (Pre-Cursor To eDiscovery Magic Quadrant)

Friday, October 17th, 2008

Earlier today, Gartner published its eDiscovery MarketScope for 2009. Written by Debra Logan, John Bace, and Whit Andrews, it is perhaps the most comprehensive “buyers guide” available for companies interested in using electronic discovery technology to lower costs.

The eDiscovery MarketScope analyzes about 20 software companies focused on electronic data discovery. Based on extensive interviews with end customers and data from the companies themselves, Gartner rates the companies using criteria similar to those used in its famous Magic Quadrant reports. It also identifies market trends, and makes predictions for 2009 and beyond.

This report is required reading for anyone considering an investment in eDiscovery software, and I strongly recommend that you get a copy, either from Gartner or some other authorized source. To give you a flavor for Gartner’s analysis, a few of its main conclusions are as follows:

1. Bringing eDiscovery In-House Dramatically Reduces Cost

This is a claim that electronic discovery software vendors often make, and prospective customers rightly question. Gartner investigates and finds that many of its corporate clients are saving large amounts of money by using eDiscovery software to reduce the amount they spend on lawyers and legal service providers. It reports that customers typically recover their money from buying eDiscovery software within 3-6 months of implementation.

2. There’s No Single, End-To-End Solution For eDiscovery

Gartner addresses what is probably the most common question I get asked by corporate counsels and litigation support managers – namely, “Isn’t there a single product I can buy that will do end-to-end eDiscovery, covering all aspects of the EDRM?” The answer, of course, is “no” and Gartner goes further by predicting that the answer will remain “no” until at least 2011. So, for the foreseeable future, customers will need to buy best-of-breed products from different vendors for different stages of the EDRM model, and ensure they integrate smoothly.

3. There Are 4 Leading eDiscovery Software Companies

Company

Product

Clearwell

Clearwell E-Discovery Platform

FTI

Attenex, RingTail

Symantec

Discovery Accelerator

Zylab

E-Discovery Management Module

List of vendors achieving highest rating of “strong positive” (from Figure 2, page 10)

Of all the companies it analyzed, Gartner only gives 4 its highest rating of “strong positive”. Each of the four has different strengths. For processing, analysis and review, Clearwell is “fast-to-install and easy-to-use” (page 12) , while FTI’s ability to offer Attenex / RingTail either hosted or on-premise “positions it well for the future” (page 13) . Symantec’s leadership in email archiving makes Discovery Accelerator a good option for its customers who need to search and export data from Enterprise Vault. Finally, Zylab is well-known within law-enforcement circles and has a strong presence in Europe and Asia.

4. There Will Be Consolidation In The Next 12 Months

As the market matures, Gartner predicts that as many as 25% of eDiscovery software providers will either merge, be acquired, or exit the business. Access Data’s ambitious bid for Guidance has publicly put Guidance in play. Beyond that, Gartner suggests that Kazeon and several other players are all likely acquisition targets for larger companies wishing to enter the eDiscovery space.

Of course, Gartner is not the only influential voice in eDiscovery. Earlier this year, George Socha and Tom Gelbmann published their Socha-Gelbmann Survey, which also provides a valuable perspective on the market. How do the two reports compare? That will be the subject of my next post.

Socha-Gelbmann Survey For 2008 Highlights Shifting Landscape In E-Discovery Software

Thursday, July 24th, 2008

Yesterday, George Socha and Tom Gelbmann published summary results for their 2008 EDD survey. George and Tom gathered self-reported data from 85 electronic data discovery service providers and 40 e-discovery litigation software companies. To help vendors resist the temptation to “exaggerate” their accomplishments, they then cross-referenced the responses against independent surveys submitted by 29 law firms and 19 corporations, and applied a healthy dose of their own good judgment. The outcome, which they will publish in-full next month, is a great snapshot of the industry, and probably the most objective ranking of e-discovery vendors that you can find.

By comparing this year’s results to the 2007 survey, you get a sense for how much has changed in the e-discovery world over the past 12 months:

Top E-Discovery Software Companies

software.jpg

Note: arrows show change to rankings from last year’s Socha-Gelbmann Survey

Autonomy and Clearwell move up to the Top 5, overtaking Attenex and CT Summation which slip back to the second tier. There are also 3 new names ranked 6 through 10 (Epiq, iConect and Symantec) who displace Cataphora, Doculex, ISYS, and Oracle, none of whom even make it into the top 15. In other words, 70% of the rankings have changed since last year.

If a litigation support manager were to focus only on the Top 5 in making her ediscovery software decision, she would have a choice of some very different solutions. Autonomy positions itself as a high-end (expensive) platform for corporations, while Lexis offers a comprehensive toolset for law firms. Guidance and Clearwell are complementary in that both provide best-of-breed solutions for parts of the EDRM model: Guidance is the leader in collection and preservation, while Clearwell is the leader in processing, analysis and review. Finally, FTI takes a services-based approach which centers around RingTail, its hosted review application.

Looking lower down the list, there were some other interesting results, primarily around which companies were NOT ranked. Kazeon made it into the third tier (ranked 11-15) whereas StoredIQ, its main competitor, did not. Nor did Recommind break into the rankings, despite making a major push into e-discovery from knowledge management over the past year. But the most striking absentees are PSS Systems and Exterro, which have pioneered litigation hold management for Fortune 100 companies. I can only guess that they cover too much of niche market to warrant inclusion in an industry-wide report.

Top E-Discovery Service Providers

In contrast to the world of software, e-discovery services saw much less movement in this year’s rankings:

service-providers.jpg

Note: arrows show change to rankings from last year’s Socha-Gelbmann Survey

There was only one change to the top 5: Fios moved up, displacing Guidance which plummeted 10-20 places down to a 16-25 ranking. In addition, there were two new players in the top 10, Epiq and Huron, who edged out Electronic Evidence Discovery and Ernst & Young.

Conclusion

Changes to the software rankings reflect broader changes in the litigation software market. As litigation discovery has moved in-house, corporations have become a major driver of purchase decisions that were previously left to law firms. Many software companies, such as Attenex, have struggled to make this transition, while others, such as Clearwell, have capitalized on it. There has been no such change in the service provider world and, as a result, the rankings are relatively stable.

It will be interesting to see what happens next year. Every other software space is dominated by a small number of players, like Oracle for databases or VMWare for virtualization. If the same is true for top ediscovery, then we can expect many fewer changes to the software rankings in future surveys as the leaders pull away from the pack.

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Top E-Discovery Software Vendors

Saturday, December 15th, 2007

There are two independent analyst reports identifying the top ediscovery software vendors.

The first, published in June 2007, is the Socha-Gelbmann Annual Electronic Discovery Survey. The authors, George Socha and Tom Gelbmann, probably know more about e-discovery than anyone else you are likely to meet. As someone who has filled out their 178-page survey, I can tell you it is excruciating in its detail and incredibly rigorous. According to the report, George and Tom contacted nearly 1,000 individuals and collected detailed data from 115 organizations.

The second analyst report is Gartner’s MarketScope, which is published today (December 2007). Its author, Debra Logan, is fast emerging as one of the leading lights of e-discovery and has great instincts about the market. For her report, Debra tells me that surveyed 30 vendors and checked over 90 customer references.

The results from the two reports are as follows:

Socha-Gelbmann Top Software Vendors (1) Gartner Top Software Vendors (2)
Attenex Attenex
Cataphora Clearwell
Clearwell FTI
CT Summation Guidance
Doculex Inference
FTI Iron Mountain/Stratify
Guidance Kazeon
ISYS Search Software Kroll
LexisNexis LexisNexis
Oracle Seagate/MetaLINCS
Zantaz (now Autonomy) Orchestria
PSS Systems
Recommind
Symantec
Xerox
Zylab

(1) Companies listed as “Top Electronic Discovery Software Providers Based on 7 Criteria” (Table 19 and 20), listed in alphabetical order. (2) Companies awarded ratings of “Positive” or “Strong Positive” (Figure 1), listed in alphabetical order.

Why are the lists so different? Primarily because of two main factors:

  1. Gartner’s list mixes service providers and software companies whereas Socha breaks them out separately. The Socha report has an entirely separate list for service providers.
  2. Socha’s report was completed 6 months earlier than Gartner’s. In that intervening period, several new players entered the e-discovery market. For example, Kazeon was ranked by Gartner earlier this year a “niche player” (lower left quadrant) in the enterprise search market, and has not been in e-discovery long enough to participate in the Socha study (or, if they did participate, they did not have enough e-discovery customers to gain a high ranking).

Conclusions

The first conclusion to draw from these lists is that any vendor not in them is probably not worth considering for e-discovery. If neither Socha nor Gartner ranked them highly, then the vendor either could not provide compelling customer references or has lost competitive bake-offs to someone who is on the list. Either way, they are best avoided.

The second thing that stands out is how different these lists are. Of the 21 vendors identified by Socha and Gartner, only 5 are ranked as top e-discovery software vendors by both of them. Those 5 are Attenex, Clearwell, FTI, Guidance, and LexisNexis. So, if you are an enterprise looking for an e-discovery solution, it is clear who you should call first.

Finally, it is worth noting that both these analyst reports are relatively new. This is the third annual survey for Socha, and the first MarketScope for Gartner. That speaks to the fact that e-discovery software is a new, fast-growing product area. More and more enterprises are adopting e-discovery software solutions, and asking analysts about them, because they offer such a compelling ROI.