Ediscovery Trends
Trends in Ediscovery and Litigation Support
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According to research done by TREC, keyword searches are largely ineffective at locating key documents. Best practices include working with opposing counsel to identify key terms and dates. Finding a proper date range can easily pare down the documents that you will eventually pay a contract attorney to review.
Coming up with good keywords is also a high priority when asking opposing counsel to search documents. If your keyword list is too broad, you will return far too many documents (and possibly be seen as overly burdensome), and if your terms are too narrow, you’re not going to find that smoking gun you’re looking for. Try to think of reasonable a minimum and maximum number of documents that would be acceptable to review, given the scope of the litigation you’re facing.
Don’t be afraid to go back to opposing counsel to modify your request for production of documents, but be sure to properly review the existing documents you have. You don’t want to ask multiple times to expand the scope of production, so be patient with the document review process before doing anything drastic. Of course, check in with your litigation support staff to see if there are any ways to more quickly and effectively search the documents you already have.
