Want a terrific guide to understanding eDiscovery? Everlaw has published a comprehensive guide for mastering ediscovery here!
The guide is titled Mastering Ediscovery: Your Guide to Rules, Workflows, and Advanced Tools, and it’s available for download here. Here are the chapters in this highly comprehensive guide:
- Chapter One-Introduction to Ediscovery: In this chapter, you’ll learn about the discovery phase of litigation, which has evolved from its origins in English common law into the modern field of ediscovery. The chapter explains how the proliferation of ESI has transformed the process, expanding it beyond litigation to include use cases like regulatory investigations and internal audits. You’ll also be introduced to key ediscovery terms, such as ESI, legal holds, and metadata.
- Chapter Two-Data Preservation and Legal Holds: In this chapter, you’ll learn about the importance of data preservation and legal holds, which are critical, proactive measures that directly impact the success of a legal case. The chapter explains that the duty to preserve data is triggered when litigation is “reasonably foreseeable”, and it outlines several events that can trigger this duty, such as a demand letter or an internal investigation.
- Chapter Three-ESI Protocols and the Meet and Confer Process: This chapter explores the importance of cooperation in ediscovery through the use of the meet and confer process and ESI protocols. It outlines how the meet and confer process, mandated by FRCP Rule 26(f), provides a structured environment for parties to proactively address potential ediscovery challenges and negotiate terms for the exchange of electronically stored information.
- Chapter Four-Document Review: In this chapter, you’ll learn why document review is the most discussed and most expensive phase of ediscovery, as it involves making critical legal decisions like responsiveness and privilege determinations under the pressure of massive ESI volume. The chapter details the key challenges, including managing human error, protecting privilege, and navigating diverse regulatory compliance issues.
- Chapter Five-Early Case Assessment: In this chapter, you’ll learn about Early Case Assessment (ECA) as a best practice for managing discovery. The chapter defines ECA as a strategic process for rapidly investigating and analyzing evidence to evaluate risks, identify key issues, and develop an informed case strategy. You will also learn the difference between ECA and Early Data Assessment (EDA), as defined by The Sedona Conference Glossary.
- Chapter Six-Predictive Coding: In this chapter, you’ll learn that Predictive Coding, also known as TAR, is an essential ediscovery tool that uses supervised machine learning to efficiently sort and prioritize documents based on relevance. The chapter explains the core TAR 2.0 (Continuous Active Learning) workflow, which is preferred for its efficiency over older TAR 1.0 methods, as it eliminates a fixed training phase.
- Chapter Seven-Ediscovery Software: In this chapter, you’ll learn that choosing the right ediscovery software is essential for managing modern legal matters, which are complicated by the explosion of data from sources like Slack and Teams, and stricter regulations like GDPR and CCPA. The chapter details how AI, including predictive coding (TAR), has become a core tool for review efficiency.
- Chapter Eight-Generative AI’s Impact on Ediscovery: In this chapter, you will learn how generative AI is transforming ediscovery by automating tasks like document review acceleration, summarization, and privilege logging. You’ll learn about a range of real-world use cases, and best practices for responsible deployment, with an emphasis on the need for prompt engineering, strict security, and using QC checkpoints to validate AI outputs.
- Chapter Nine-Current Ediscovery Considerations and Challenges: In this chapter, you will learn that managing ediscovery is more challenging than ever due to Big Data—characterized by the “Three V’s” of volume, velocity, and variety—necessitating scalable technology for defensibility. The chapter addresses how mobile device data and the rise of personal-device use create privacy and collection hurdles. It details the significant complexity introduced by Enterprise Solutions and Collaboration Apps (like Teams), particularly concerning hyperlinked files and the lack of traditional attachments.
- Chapter Ten-Conclusion and Additional Resources: In this chapter, you’ll learn that ediscovery is rapidly evolving, driven by seven key trends that will shape future best practices. These include the expansion of ediscovery use cases beyond litigation, the proliferation of emerging data sources (like IoT and GenAI), and the increasing automation via Agentic AI. The chapter emphasizes the need for strict compliance with data privacy and cross-border transfer rules, which is fueling the consolidation of ediscovery, IG, and compliance functions.
You can also read the guide chapter-by-chapter online, but you may still want to download a copy in case you’re not connected for some reason. Plus, I get credit when you use the link to download it, so there’s that. 😉
Regardless, it’s a very comprehensive guide at 151 pages(!), so it’s designed to give you a deep understanding of the topics covered in each chapter. How do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time!* You can download the guide here and go through it at your own pace. If you want to understand not just the fundamentals, but also best practices and current trends, Everlaw’s guide to Mastering Ediscovery is for you!
So, what do you think? Are you interested in mastering eDiscovery? If so, then download the guide! And please share any comments you might have or if you’d like to know more about a particular topic.
Image created using Microsoft Designer, using the term “robot lawyer holding a knife and fork approaching a robot elephant”. Now you understand the graphic at the top! 😉
Disclosure: Everlaw is an Educational Partner and sponsor of eDiscovery Today
Disclaimer: The views represented herein are exclusively the views of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views held by my employer, my partners or my clients. eDiscovery Today is made available 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 Today 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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