• Home
  • News
  • Firms & Lawyers
  • Courts
  • Judges
  • Surveys/lists
  • Columns
  • Verdicts
  • Public Notices
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe

Home > E-Discovery Profits: Drawing Blood From a Stone?

Font Size: increase font decrease font

E-Discovery Profits: Drawing Blood From a Stone?

By Gina Passarella Contact All Articles 

The Legal Intelligencer

November 16, 2012

  •    
  •    
  •    
  •      
 
Discovery Dollars

Related Items

  • E-Discovery's Tipping Point: Firms Deciding to Get in or Get Out
  • Investing in E-Discovery Versus Showing it the Door

Editor's note: This is the third installment of a four-part series examining the ways in which firms are managing e-discovery work and whether there is profit to be had in such endeavors.

E-discovery is a booming growth industry with falling margins.

As clients look to shave as many dollars off of the expense line of e-discovery as possible, law firms that want to make money on e-discovery — outside of the high rates a few partners can charge for legal expertise in the area — have to be willing to forgo substantial rates in favor of volume.

The good news for firms is that the majority of money to be made in the e-discovery realm is on what only lawyers can do — document review. Interestingly enough, however, even some of the firms that have insourced the entire e-discovery delivery service model still use outside contract lawyers despite the fact that some clients are starting to refuse to pay a markup on review work outsourced to a vendor or contract firm.

The Rand Institute for Civil Justice released a study in September titled "Where the Money Goes: Understanding Litigant Expenditures for Producing Electronic Discovery." In it, Rand found collection of data accounted for 8 percent of e-discovery costs, processing accounted for 19 percent and document review accounted for 73 percent of all e-discovery costs. According to the survey, vendors played the dominant role in collection and processing while outside counsel handled the bulk of document review.

The Rand study participants, which consisted of large corporations across several industries, noted they were looking only to outsource "commoditized" work. They were looking to bring the collection process in-house and limit the document review they send out.

Several e-discovery lawyers agreed, and the Rand study found, that the hourly rate of a document review attorney has "already hit bottom," as Morgan, Lewis & Bockius' eData group leader, Stephanie A. "Tess" Blair, said.

The two other pieces to attack from a cost perspective in that equation then are the number of documents to be reviewed and the speed with which they are reviewed, said WilmerHale Discovery Solutions Managing Director Steven Berrent.

"That's where the race is now," Blair said.

Firms and vendors are in a race to provide lower-cost services with the knowledge that the bubble very well may eventually burst.

A browser or device that allows javascript is required to view this content.

Continue reading

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

Next



Subscribe to The Legal Intelligencer

You must be signed in to comment on an article

Find similar content

Firms mentioned

    
  • Drinker Biddle & Reath
  • Jackson Lewis
  • Morgan, Lewis & Bockius
  • Pepper Hamilton
  • Reed Smith
  • Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr

Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • WilmerHale Discovery Solutions
  • The Cowen Group
  • Morgan Lewis & Bockius
  • Rand Institute

Key categories

    
  • E-discovery

Most viewed stories

    
  1. Bernstein Upholds $78.4 Mil. Verdict in Phila. Med Mal Case
    •      
  2. New District Judge Takes Firm Line on Attorney Conduct
    •      
  3. Workplace Bullying: Managing the Organizational Playground
    •      
  4. House Committee OKs Bills on Retirement Age, Traffic Court
    •      
  5. Third Circuit Rejects NLRB Recess Appointment
    •      
lawjobs.com

TOP JOBS

MORE JOBS

POST A JOB

From the Law.com Network

Three Strategies for Reducing Class Action Costs

Managing Relationships With Legal Project Management

News Corp. Hires Ex-Skadden Communications Chief Bush

Law Firm Leaders' Confidence Slipping, Says Survey

Contrite Companies Can Win Forgiveness in Bribery Cases
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Plaintiffs Want to See Toyota's 'Crown Jewels'
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Tech Circuit: LegalTech West Coast Edition

Silicon Startups

Prolific ADA Plaintiff Faces Nemesis in Harassment Suit

Ullyot Exit Closes Chapter for Facebook

Rothstein Bankruptcy Trustee Files New Reorganization Plan
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Fla. Bar Wants Disbarment for Former Judge
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Bar Candidate Quits N.Y. Job To Satisfy N.J. Practice Bylaw

Pro Bono Work Proposed as Condition for Bar Admission
  •      
    • Subscription Required

The Affordable State-Specific Practice Solution
Available in NY, NJ, PA and CT editions - research, draft and prepare even the most complex cases with ease.

Judge in Stop-and-Frisk Case Relishes Her Independence

Ground Is Shifting in 14-Year Litigation

High Court Names Evers as the FJD's Court Administrator
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Third Circuit Rules Against Citgo in Case Over Oil Spill

Law Schools Are Looking Beyond LSATs, Says Mich. Dean

Is Freezing Your Eggs the Solution?

Water Warriors: Local Governments Bring Pollution Suits
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Sanction Reversed; Filing of Sexually Explicit Chat OKd
  •      
    • Subscription Required

DeKalb Judge Dismisses, Then Recuses

Jury Finds For Attorney In Legal-Mal Case
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Corporate Bribery Case Part Of National Trend
  •      
    • Subscription Required

Court Continues To Grant Lawyers Fraud Immunity
  •      
    • Subscription Required

  • About |
  • ALM Properties |
  • ALM Reprints |
  • Customer Support |
  • Privacy Policy |
  • Terms & Conditions |
  • ALM User License Agreement
ALM Media