Struggling to turn subpoenas around quickly? Join the EDRM webinar sponsored by Exterro to learn the new standard for subpoena response!
Tomorrow, EDRM will host the Exterro sponsored webinar titled 5 Minutes, Not 90: The New Standard for Subpoena Response (available here) at 1pm ET (noon CT, 10am PT). The panel will discuss Exterro Subpoena Manager, where legal teams move from fragmented intake to a governed, structured process where AI handles the operational load: capturing requests, extracting deadlines and metadata, structuring records, routing work, and triggering follow-up.
The result:
- Faster time from receipt to action
- Cleaner handoffs into downstream review and production
- Full auditability across every step
- Less rework, fewer delays, and better visibility
And throughout it all, human oversight stays exactly where it belongs—on legal judgment and decisions. The panel will also preview Exterro’s AI vision and how it will extend this model across legal operations.
Speakers: Bryant Bell, Senior Product Marketing Manager at Exterro and Angie Hoffman, Solutions Engineer at Exterro.
Let’s face it: A typical subpoena can take 60–90 minutes just to read, enter, triage, and route across disconnected systems. Multiply that across hundreds or thousands of requests—and you’re looking at weeks of lost time every year spent on clerical work. This session breaks down exactly where that time goes—and what changes when the workflow is rebuilt. So, register here to see exactly where that time goes—and how to reduce a 90-minute workflow to just 5 minutes tomorrow!
So, what do you think? Are you struggling to turn subpoenas around quickly? If so, attend the webinar tomorrow! And please share any comments you might have or if you’d like to know more about a particular topic.
Disclosure: Exterro 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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