Sentences with phrase «e-discovery area the firm»

Not exact matches

«With Ringtail, law firms can provide more cost - effective e-discovery services to their clients as well as expand into areas like data analytics, predictive coding and managed review.
Brooks Kushman announced today that Phyllis G. Morey has joined the law firm as head of Commercial Litigation and e-Discovery Compliance and will spearhead the firm «s expanded focus of these key areas.
Leonard acknowledges that in a competitive legal market firms like McCarthy's are competing with the big four accounting firms and e-discovery is one where there will be more competition in the document review / information governance area.
The service reports on several major disruptive areas, including the Big Four Disruptors, Litigation Funding, Machine Learning, Document Analysis, e-Discovery, Alternate Providers, Legal Research and Shared Service Centers — offering insights into trends, emerging providers, regulatory developments and law firm responses.
That said, technological applications — in contract management, e-discovery, and other high - volume areas — are standardizing, automating, and «productizing» what were once labor - intensive tasks performed by lawyers at law firms.
We are seeing a lot of this already in the areas of document review and e-discovery, but automation will start to creep into other aspects of running a law firm as well.
Learn the key survey findings, areas of practical concern for multinational corporations and law firms, and expert perspectives on the evolving legal, technical and cultural landscape impacting e-discovery in the Asian region.
As e-discovery purveys more and more practices and practice areas, it becomes important for solo and small firm lawyers to at least have a cursory understanding of the process.
The highest performing law firms know that instead of trying to retain areas where they used to make money (such as e-discovery), they will maintain their position by being able to handle specialized legal matters requiring specific expertise.
The panelists will include The Honourable Mr. Justice Colin L. Campbell of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, Master Calum MacLeod of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, and legal practitioners such as Susan Wortzman, founder of Wortzman Nickle and the Chair of the Steering Committee of Sedona Conference ® Working Group 7, Sedona Canada, and Co-Chair of the Inaugural Program together with Kelly Friedman, a litigation partner with Ogilvy Renault LLP and Co-Chair of Sedona Canada Inaugural Conference, Dominic Jaar, legal counsel at Ledjit, an information management, e-discovery and law practice management consulting firm, Jonathan Redgrave a founding partner of Redgrave Daley Ragan & Wagner and Steering Committee Chair Emeritus of The Sedona Conference ® Working Group on Electronic Document Retention and Production (WG1), as well as Martin Felsky of Commonwealth Legal, David Gray, a partner in the Litigation Group of McCarthy Tétrault in Montréal, Glenn A. Smith, one of the five founding partners of Lenczner Slaght, Karen Groulx, a partner at Pallett Valo LLP, Peg Duncan, Department of Justice, Canada, Robert Deanne, a partner with Borden Ladner Gervais LLP in Vancouver, Ron Hudges of Nixon Peabody, Kenneth J. Withers, Director of Judicial Education and Content for The Sedona Conference ®, as well as other members of the bench and bar from both Canada and the U.S. Panel discussions will focus on 7 key areas:
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