eDiscovery Daily Blog

The Cloud is a “Rush” Project’s Best Friend: eDiscovery Best Practices

Today is Friday.  While many of you can look forward to a long, enjoyable Memorial Day weekend, chances are that at least a few of you will be making weekend plans when, late in the day, you will receive a CD, DVD, hard drive or link to data on a server somewhere that needs to be reviewed over the weekend.  There goes your weekend!

Not only that, good luck connecting with your in-house litigation support person or a vendor for assistance late on a Friday – you may play a game of “phone tag” or wait for email responses for a bit.  Lit support people and vendors have weekend plans too.  Even if you do get in touch with them, you then have to fill out a form and arrange to get the data to them, which can be tricky.  It’s a lot of time, hassle and cost to get started – especially if you’re at a small law firm that doesn’t already have an eDiscovery software application to support processing and review of the data.

When consumers quickly need to find that special item to buy, or that new cool song to download, or need to stream the new season of Bloodline (available starting today on Netflix) for binge watching, they turn to the cloud.  More than ever, attorneys are turning to the cloud as well to help them get their “rush” project started immediately.  And, you don’t even have to own the software or interact with anyone to get started.

As an eDiscovery provider that offers a no-risk free trial, CloudNine (shameless plug warning!) sees at least one or two clients a week that give our software a try (many of them with “rush” projects just like this).  The trend toward automation and the cloud in the industry has not only made eDiscovery more affordable than ever, it has also made it easier than ever to get a “rush” project off and running.

If you find yourself in that situation later today, here are three easy steps to get started:

  1. Sign up for a free account here. You will receive an email with your credentials (including temporary password), to get started.
  2. When you first log in, you’ll see a button to “Upload Data”. That will take you to a form to download the CloudNine Discovery client (which is a Windows based client application that resides on your desktop) for uploading data for processing.  Download and install the client to upload data.
  3. Once the client is downloaded and installed, launch the client, log in with your newly created credentials and simply follow the wizard prompts to upload the desired data set and put it into the project of your choice (which you can create if it doesn’t already exist). It’s that easy!

We can’t get you out of working this weekend.  But, we can take the hassle out of getting started.  You’re welcome.  :o)

So, what do you think?  Have you been faced with any “rush” eDiscovery projects lately?  Please share any comments you might have or if you’d like to know more about a particular topic.

eDiscovery Daily will return on Tuesday as we remember this Memorial Day the people who gave their lives while serving in our armed forces.

Disclaimer: The views represented herein are exclusively the views of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views held by CloudNine. eDiscovery Daily is made available by CloudNine solely for educational purposes to provide general information about general eDiscovery principles and not to provide specific legal advice applicable to any particular circumstance. eDiscovery Daily should not be used as a substitute for competent legal advice from a lawyer you have retained and who has agreed to represent you.

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