EDiscovery:Emails No Longer Most CommonlySpecified Documents
Symantec Survey Finds Emails Are No Longer the Most Commonly Specified Documents in eDiscovery Requests
Auckland – 21 September 2011 - Symantec Corp. (Nasdaq: SYMC) today announced the findings of its 2011 Information Retention and eDiscovery Survey which examined how enterprises manage their ever-growing volumes of electronically stored information and prepare for the eventuality of an eDiscovery request. The survey of legal and IT personnel at 2,000 enterprises worldwide found email is not the primary source of records companies must produce, and more importantly, respondents who employ best practices for records and information management are significantly less at risk of court sanctions or fines.
“The fact that email is no longer the primary source of information for an eDiscovery request is a significant change from what has been the norm over the past several years,” said Dean Gonsowski, eDiscovery Counsel at Symantec. “With the wide variety of sources in play, including loose documents, structured data, SharePoint content and even social media, it is not enough for legal and IT to simply focus upon email alone. It’s critical for the two departments to work together to develop and implement an effective information retention policy.”
Email Does Not Equal
eDiscovery
When asked what types of documents are
most commonly part of an eDiscovery request, respondents
selected files and documents (67 percent), and database or
application data (61 percent) ahead of email (58 percent).
As evidence of just how many sources companies must be
prepared to produce information from, more than half
indicated SharePoint files (51 percent), and nearly half
cited instant messages and text messages (44 percent) and
social media (41 percent).
Better Practices Drive
Dramatically Better Outcomes
The survey found wide
variations in information retention practices among
enterprises. Companies that employ best practices, such as
automating the placement of legal holds and leveraging an
archiving tool instead of relying on backups, fare
dramatically better when it comes to responding to an
eDiscovery request. These top- tier companies are 81 percent
more likely to have a formal retention plan in place; 63
percent more likely to automate legal holds; and 50 percent
more likely to use a formal archiving tool.
Implementing these best practices translates to a 64 percent faster response time with a 2.3 times higher success rate when responding to an eDiscovery request. Consequently, these top-tier companies are significantly less likely to suffer negative consequences than companies that do not have a formal information retention policy in place. Top-tier companies are:
• 78 percent less likely to be sanctioned
by the courts
• 47 percent less likely to lead to
compromised legal position
• 20 percent less likely to
have fines levied
• 45 percent less likely to disclose
too much information leading to compromised litigation
position.
Despite Risks, Organisations Still Not
Prepared
Despite the risks, the survey found nearly
half of respondents do not have an information retention
plan in place. Thirty percent are only discussing how to do
so, and 14 percent have no plan to do so. When asked why,
respondents indicated lack of need (41 percent); too costly
(38 percent); nobody has been chartered with that
responsibility (27 percent); don’t have time (26 percent);
and lack of expertise (21 percent) are top
reasons.
Recommendations
• Create and
implement a records and information management (RIM)
program. Get started with a formal plan as soon as
possible, and then refine it accordingly to address specific
laws and regulations governing the retention and
availability of information. Without a formal plan it is
difficult to know when – and what – to delete, which
drives over-retention and creates additional risk.
• Periodically delete electronically stored
information (ESI) according to your RIM program. Most
organisations (79 percent) believe that a proper information
retention plan should allow them to delete information. Yet,
20 percent of organisations still retain archived data
forever. This means that a large percentage of organisations
are not correctly deploying the archive to minimise data
through expiry and by implementing document retention
policies. Delete according to your information retention
plan to reduce storage, litigation exposure and eDiscovery
costs.
• Use backup for recovery, archiving for
discovery. The survey found approximately 40 percent of
organisations keep data on their backup tapes infinitely and
use those backup tapes for their legal hold process. This
exposes them to the costly and dangerous proposition of
restoration in the event of litigation. Backup is intended
for recovery purposes, and 30-60 days is the longest
data should be backed up. Files should then be automatically
archived or deleted. Using backup only for disaster recovery
enables an organisation to delete older backup sets within
months instead of years.
• Deploy advanced legal
hold processes and solutions to minimise the risk of
non-compliance. The preservation step of the litigation
process is fraught with risks due to the potential of
spoliation sanctions, which are often levied after the loss
or inadvertent deletion of ESI. The safest strategy is to
deploy next generation legal hold applications to better
communicate the importance of a given legal hold notice,
track acknowledgement and periodically issue reminders to
affected custodians. Leveraging software here is
particularly critical since legal holds can encompass
thousands of custodians and span many years, both of which
stress manual solutions.
• Conduct litigation
readiness exercises to determine exposure areas and
formulate a prioritised remediation plan. It is critical
for organisations to assess their current state of
preparedness to determine how well they can safely and
efficiently respond to an eDiscovery request or governmental
inquiry. By taking a long term approach and leveraging
industry best practices (along the EDRM spectrum), companies
are in a much better position to withstand challenges to
their internal processes and avoid negative consequences.
For example, top-tier companies in the survey were 78
percent less likely to be sanctioned by the courts and 47
percent less likely to have their legal position
unnecessarily compromised.
• Prepare for eDiscovery
and governmental inquires by casting a wider ESI net,
including social media, cloud data, instant messaging and
structured data systems. eDiscovery is no longer
primarily limited to email. Identify where all
electronically stored information resides company-wide so
that these sources do not go unrecognised. Once these
sources of potentially responsive ESI are accounted for, the
right eDiscovery tools need to be deployed so that these
disparate types of ESI can be defensibly collected and
processed for review in a singular auditable
environment.
Symantec’s 2011 Information Retention
and eDiscovery Survey
Applied Research fielded this
survey by telephone in June and July of 2011. We spoke to
2,000 Enterprises from 28 countries. The organisations,
which included a large range of industries, were enterprises
with 1,000 employees or more. Respondents consisted of both
a representative from IT management and a representative
from Legal. By including both we were able to get a holistic
picture of information retention and eDiscovery issues in
the organisation. Globally, this survey has a reliability of
95 percent confidence with +/- 2.2 percent margin of
error.
ENDS