eDiscovery Daily Blog

Today’s the Day for the Best Practices in Keyword Searching Webcast!: eDiscovery Best Practices

Today at 12:00pm CT (1:00pm ET, 10:00 am PT), CloudNine will be conducting a webcast titled Best Practices for eDiscovery Searching via the BrightTALK network.  There’s still time to register for it, if you haven’t already!

Our webcast session will cover goals for effective searching, what to consider prior to collecting ESI that will be subject to search, mechanisms for culling prior to searching, mechanisms for improving search recall and precision, challenges to effective searching and recommended best practices for searching and validating your search results to ensure that they are effective.

We will cover many of the concepts we’ve covered on this blog over the years, showing you how not to get wild with wildcards, how to cull out email signature logos from review, how to expand the recall of searches to capture additional hits that might be missed due to misspellings or poor quality text, how to effectively conduct name searches to maximize hit retrieval and how to account for noise words in your search results.

We will also use external sites to help us check our proposed wildcard terms for variations to ensure that our term isn’t too broad (or too narrow) and we will use other sites to help us determine how large of a sample size we need for testing our search result set and even generate our sample set for us.

And, finally, we will look at relevant case law regarding disputes over search protocol and results.

Karen DeSouza, the Director of Review Services at CloudNine, and I will conduct this hour long webcast to discuss best practices for effective searching that may just help you decide whether keyword search still has a place in your eDiscovery workflow.  Click here to register for today’s webinar.  Hope to see you then!

With all of the hype surrounding Technology Assisted Review, many wonder if keyword search still has a place in eDiscovery.  Perhaps it does, if it’s conducted properly.  Find out today the best practices for eDiscovery searching using keywords and decide for yourself!

So, what do you think?  Is keyword searching dead?  Please share any comments you might have or if you’d like to know more about a particular topic.

Disclaimer: The views represented herein are exclusively the views of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views held by CloudNine. eDiscovery Daily is made available by CloudNine 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 Daily 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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