The Williams Mullen Edge
The growth in the variety and volume of electronic information can create significant eDiscovery burdens, but our eDiscovery and Information Governance(“EDIG”) attorneys also understand that this information provides an opportunity to conduct litigation more efficiently and effectively. An organization exists to carry out certain purposes, and it does so through the actions and decisions of its constituent managers, employees or members. In our electronic age, the vast majority of these actions and decisions are effectuated or evidenced by electronic means. This provides a rich repository of electronic information that, when skillfully targeted, can provide critical information about an organization’s position in the early stages of litigation. Our EDIG team has proven experience in targeting a client’s electronic information to get to the critical answer of what happened and why early in litigation, and using this information to drive the strategy of the case. The information economy has changed the world, and our EDIG attorneys understand this and use these changes to conduct more efficient and effective litigation.
Williams Mullen offers clients a team of attorneys and technology professionals dedicated to electronic discovery, information governance and high technology issues. We regularly assist companies in conducting information governance and litigation readiness reviews and developing appropriate defensible policies, procedures and practices. Our team is adept at working with clients’ data through all phases of discovery – identification, preservation, collection, processing, review, analysis, production and presentation – and helps decrease the overall costs of eDiscovery.
Incorporating Effective Information Governance and Risk Management Into Your Corporate Governance
Skillfully governing a business requires skillfully governing its information, leveraging it for best use, and avoiding the risks that it can create. Information governance is the creation of enterprise-wide policies, procedures and practices that define the life cycle of information. It encompasses enterprise risk management, information technology, record management, knowledge management, privacy and security, business continuity/disaster recovery, electronic discovery and archiving. What distinguishes information governance from mere information management is that information governance determines why a business creates and uses information, not just how.
In today’s business world, information is being created in increasingly variant forms – email; electronic documents such as those created using Word, Excel, and PowerPoint; web pages, internal wikis or other knowledge management platforms; social media; and collaboration site content, and new information technologies continue to emerge. The ease of creating electronic information often leads to the retention of massive volumes of information, with the typical worker creating or handling 1.6GB, or the equivalent of 100,000 pages of printed text, every day. It is not unusual for a business to experience 30%, 50% or even 100% annual growth in data volumes. Understanding and managing how all of this information is created, moved, stored and discarded is critical to the success of any company, and, to the extent a business does not purposefully control its information, it faces potentially serious risks.
Williams Mullen’s EDIG team features attorneys well-versed in the field of eDiscovery and information governance who work with clients to analyze the purposes of and risks associated with each process and related organizational unit within their businesses. We then assist client-companies in developing policies regarding the creation, maintenance, retention and removal of information to accomplish each business purpose, satisfy legal requirements, and reduce risks with over- and under-retention of data.
Bringing You Uniform eDiscovery Strategies to Reduce Risk and Cost While Increasing Efficiency
One important aspect of effective information governance is the establishment of uniform, reasonable, repeatable and defensible eDiscovery policies, practices and protocols. But even when these are in place, it is critical to employ them strategically in any particular litigation with an eye toward how they might affect other pending or future litigation. Williams Mullen acts as National eDiscovery Counsel for several clients, providing guidance in crafting defensible and uniform approaches to records management and retention, litigation hold implementation, legacy and obsolete data disposal and migration, and outside vendor relationships and costs. We provide strategic uniform advice across all of a client’s litigation matters to reduce the risk created by variation in practices among matters.
Our experience serving as lead eDiscovery counsel also increases efficiency and reduces the burden of eDiscovery for our clients by leveraging our knowledge gained in one litigation for use in another. Williams Mullen’s EDIG team can track and maintain information gathered in one matter for use in another.
A Team with Proven Experience in Reducing the Burden of eDiscovery Through Skillful Advocacy and Advanced Technology
A significant number of sanctions are awarded each year for failing to adequately preserve, identify, review and produce relevant documents and data in litigation. However, sanctions can be avoided if counsel has a sufficient understanding of eDiscovery obligations and how to fulfill them. Williams Mullen recognizes that eDiscovery can impose significant burdens on our clients and frequently works with clients to refine eDiscovery protocols to reduce those burdens and to include protective mechanisms to limit the scope of preservation and discovery and safeguard privileged or protected information.
In addition, Williams Mullen EDIG attorneys stay abreast of developments in eDiscovery law and advances in technology to reduce the risk of discovery failures. Our EDIG team continually evaluates the latest search and review technologies, and their application, and thus can assist clients in conducting less expensive, more efficient and, most importantly, compliant document reviews.