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A Strategic Blueprint for Smarter Document Review: Artificial Intelligence Trends

Strategic Blueprint for Smarter Document

In their latest article, Exterro shows you a strategic blueprint for smarter document review – part of creating a smarter eDiscovery playbook!

The article titled (wait for it!) A Strategic Blueprint for Smarter Document Review, available here) discusses how document review and production represent the most complex, costly, and high-stakes chapters of any litigation response plan. When corporate legal departments drown in data, it is not because they lack tools; it is because too much irrelevant information enters the review pipeline too early. Achieving true operational velocity and predictable legal spend requires organizations to disrupt the traditional discovery curve.

In this installment, Exterro draws directly from the core directives of our primary whitepaper, A Guide to Creating a Smarter eDiscovery Playbook, to establish an architecture where early-stage, privacy-first intelligence isolates what matters most before an attorney ever touches a file. (Earlier posts in this series covered building your teamestablishing preservation triggerscreating an intelligent legal hold workflow, and collecting data for decision confidence, among others.) 

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So, how can you shift the AI paradigm? How can you operationalize consistency in the coding pane? And how can you establish review & production configuration standards? Find out here, it’s only one click. It’s smart to click! 😉

So, what do you think? How smart is your document review process? Please share any comments you might have or if you’d like to know more about a particular topic.

Image created using DALL-E 3, using the term “robot lawyer dressed in a suit looking at a blueprint”.

Disclosure: Exterro is an Educational Partner and sponsor of eDiscovery Today

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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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