Litigation and E-Discovery Trend Surveys Find Similar Results
Thursday, November 19th, 2009
As the Mark Twain quote goes, there are “lies, damn lies and statistics.” In this case, however, and regardless of the exact numbers, two recent surveys provide some very interesting directional trending. The first is Fulbright & Jaworski’s 6th Annual Litigation Trends Survey. In addition to covering a range of general and vertically oriented topics, they also focus on electronic discovery specifically. Not surprisingly, reducing e-discovery costs bubbles up to the top of the list as major initiatives for most respondents. Interestingly though, remediation plans attacking this problem seem to fall into two different camps. On the one hand, 24% of respondents plan on outsourcing certain e-discovery tasks further leveraging preferred partners. Conversely, the method that leads the pack (at a whopping 47%) is the corporate initiative of taking components of e-discovery in-house. Other methods were listed, but most didn’t appear to have critical mass, including: using clawback agreements more, enforcing document retention policies, and negotiating with the opposition over the scope of discovery.
Similarly, Clearwell Systems recently conducted a survey in partnership with analyst firm Enterprise Strategy Group titled Trends in Electronic Discovery – A Market Perspective, which attempted to pinpoint similar pain points and solutions. The questions focused more on 2010 planning and they found a general expectation of more litigation/regulatory inquiries where 53% of the respondents expect the number of lawsuits and regulatory inquiries to increase by at least 20% in 2010, with 13% of respondents planning for an increase of 50 percent or more. Again, not surprisingly, many plan on attacking this increase in litigation (and the corresponding e-discovery costs) by bring parts of the process in house. In fact, 48% indicated that they currently have an active project to bring segments of the e-discovery process in-house. And for those that aren’t currently in the building process, 87% of respondents plan to budget for technology that specifically supports the electronic discovery process in 2010.
Given the length of time required for planning, RFPs and e-discovery tool procurement, clearly time is of the essence for companies that want to take advantage of internal solutions in the 2010 time frame. Failure to get off the dime means that an enterprise is more likely to get caught in the middle of deliberation, versus deployment.
Part I of this series on
Earlier today,