Summary
The tide of data never stops rising, and the types and sources of data never stop multiplying. Never have there been so many communication devices, apps, and services available. Never have there been so many ways to collaborate with others and generate electronically-stored information (ESI). Unfortunately, that also means there has never been more data that legal practitioners must somehow find a way to analyze and review. Finding a way that is efficient and effective requires understanding the range of tools and techniques available to you so you can pick the right tool for the right job.
In this Practice Guide
- Use cases and goals for analytic tool use
- The range of analytic tools available
- How to match tools to your goals
Key Insights
- Which tools are best for revealing unknown unknowns
- Which tools are best for collection gap analysis
- Which tools are best for fast ECA and review
Practice Guide Download
About the Authors
From the author
ED104 – Time to Make the Donuts: Processing Fundamentals
The range of potential ESI sources is continually multiplying and diversifying. Processing is how we work with that diverse range of materials without using as many different pieces of software as there are types of sources and how we enable searching and document identification across different source types.
Sampling Techniques for Litigation and Investigations
Despite years of discussion in the eDiscovery industry about the power and importance of sampling techniques – particularly in the context of technology-assisted review (TAR), many practitioners remain unfamiliar with what they can accomplish with them, and when, outside of TAR, they might do so.