It’s a win-win when firms bring more e-discovery work in-house

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How much is litigation support revenue growing today?
Why are nearly 80 percent of surveyed firms assigning e-discovery fees as billable hours?
What investment is required and how quickly can it pay off?

Learn the answers to these and other key questions about e-discovery billing trends and practices. Plus find out how firms are bringing more e-discovery in-house to increase revenue and reduce overhead.

Download our complimentary white paper:
>>How to Recapture the Discovery Fees Your Law Firm Used to Earn:
Increasing Revenue and Reducing Overhead in the Era of Electronic Discovery
By Kristin Branson, J.D., Editor-at-Large, TechnoLawyer

With today’s large volume of electronic data, e-discovery adds significant cost to nearly every case. Many firms have used outside consultants to process e-discovery data for review and then either absorbed the costs or passed them on to clients.

But with today’s easy-to-use software, e-discovery data processing is becoming more manageable―the modern equivalent of billable work that firms performed in past years with paper documents. With that in mind, more firms are bringing a portion of e-discovery processing in-house―especially for smaller cases―and reaping the benefits.

To find out how, read the complimentary white paper:

>>How to Recapture the Discovery Fees Your Law Firm Used to Earn:
Increasing Revenue and Reducing Overhead in the Era of Electronic Discovery
By Kristin Branson, J.D., Editor-at-Large, TechnoLawyer

In the white paper, Branson explores the trend of bringing e-discovery back in-house and addresses a variety of questions―for example:

• How much is litigation support revenue growing today?
• Why are nearly 80 percent of surveyed firms assigning e-discovery fees as billable hours?
• What data volume has worked for firms taking a portion of their processing in-house?
• What investment is required?
• How quickly can it pay off?

Find out more by reading the complimentary white paper today.