Posts Tagged ‘SPi’

Shakeout In The Litigation Support Industry

Monday, March 16th, 2009

One of the more surprising aspects of the recession (at least to me) is the immediate and dramatic impact it has had on litigation support service providers. On one side of the coin, you have large players like SPi, which in 2007 was Attenex’s largest reseller, exiting the business altogether, and several other service providers in obvious difficulty. On the other side, I see a handful of service providers gaining share and attracting new investors. In the past month alone, I have spoken to a handful of investor groups who are either investing or looking to invest in litigation support service providers.

From what I can tell, there seem to be 3 factors that are causing problems for the industry:

1. The credit crunch:

Many service providers rely on “lines of credit” to fund day-to-day operations, meaning they pay their bills by taking debt secured against receivables and other assets. But in the last few months, that’s become much harder to do. Nowadays, banks do not want to give lines of credit to anyone, even if you pay them a higher interest rate. All the banks care about is reducing risk and strengthening their own balance sheets. So it has become harder for service providers to finance their businesses in this way.

2. Paper business is shrinking:

Many service providers started life as copy/scanning operations before expanding to include electronic information, and some still rely on the paper business as a steady source of cash. I have been told by several people in the business that demand for paper-services has fallen dramatically in the past few months. Their stories reminded me of what’s happening in the newspaper business: everyone knows that newspaper and magazine subscriptions are decreasing over time, but it’s happening much faster than anyone thought it would. As a result, it seems that service providers are getting less cash from the paper business than they expected – right at the time when banks are least interested in letting them borrow more to make up the difference.

3. Electronic data discovery is growing more competitive:

In the early days of electronic discovery, companies had little choice but to send out their data to the handful of service providers who had the processing, review and hosting facilities to manage it. Today, data volumes are much larger, making it a bigger market, but there are also lot more options: companies can use software to manage electronic discovery in-house; they can send it to a law firm, many of whom now have internal litigation support teams; or they can choose between larger numbers of service providers offering a much wider array of services.

Given these challenges, how is it that some service providers are able to grow and gain share, while others stumble? From my discussions with many firms – some doing well, others not – I see several common steps that the strongest players are taking to adapt to today’s harsher economic climate. These steps include:

  • Strengthen the balance sheet, by raising money from equity investors and/or restructuring debt obligations. This provides more operating flexibility and reduces the risk of tripping over bank covenants.
  • Sell or shutter the paper business. Just like making CDs is a distraction to the music business, paper is takes time and energy away from electronic discovery. Shutting down paper operations frees bandwidth and resources to concentrate on the growth part of the business.
  • Innovate in service offerings. It is not enough to offer processing, review and hosting like everyone else. The best service providers have become trusted advisors by bringing their clients compelling new services, like for example early case analysis.
  • Focus, focus, focus. In a big, competitive industry like litigation support, service providers have to find their niche. This can be a specific geography or an industry. But for the larger, national players it is typically a handful of key services which they get everyone (sales, marketing, project management, etc.) lined up behind selling and delivering.

Compared to many sectors of the economy (e.g., retail, travel, luxury goods), the litigation support services industry is well-positioned to grow through the downturn. But there’s no doubt things have changed, and many of the strategies appropriate in 2007 no longer apply in 2009.