2008 Litigation Trends Survey Includes E-Discovery
Nov 3rd, 2008 | By admin | Category: E-DiscoveryThe Fulbright and Jaworski law firm has released its latest Litigation Trends Survey of corporate law departments in 2008. The survey includes findings on e-discovery.
The part of Fulbright’s Litigation Trends Survey related to e-discovery is helpful for those who want to understand corporate law department’s current approaches to e-discovery, their preparedness, and their progress towards adapting to e-discovery law.
You can download Fulbright’s Litigation Trends Survey here (by filling out the form) or download previous annual trends reports here.
This is the fifth year Fulbright has polled corporate law departments in the U.S. and U.K. on the state of global litigation. The 2008 survey drew input from 358 in-house counsel on both sides of the Atlantic, including 251 U.S. respondents. The survey, initially launched by Fulbright in 2004, is the largest canvas of corporate counsel on litigation issues and trends.
E-Discovery is included in the Trends Survey.
For e-discovery, the report included a number of findings. Fulbright’s press release noted this:
Of course, e-discovery and electronically stored information remain an important part of the litigation process, as a normal part of discovery and document production. And it appears that some jurisdictions may still lag behind on dealing with electronic discovery. Twelve percent of companies said they had been before a court or other litigation tribunal ill-equipped to deal with complex electronic data discovery. For financial services and technology firms, which have mounds of e-files and other electronically stored data, 19% and 18%, respectively, reported facing courts and tribunals not up to the challenge.
Survey Details
Fulbright explains more details about the report for those who are interested in how the survey was conducted:
The 2008 Fulbright & Jaworski Litigation Trends Survey was conducted from May 22 through July 18 by Greenwood Associates, a business research firm in Houston that has produced previous editions of the report. The survey, launched by Fulbright in 2004, is the largest polling of corporate counsel on litigation issues and concerns. This year’s Trends Survey canvassed 358 in-house counsel in the U.S. and U.K. More than two-thirds identified themselves as either general counsel or deputy general counsel with 7% holding title of senior counsel, 10% associate general counsel, and 15% staff counsel.
The 2008 survey asks in-house counsel to consider the types of cases they fear most, as well as their attitudes on outside counsel, litigation costs and staffing, arbitration and regulatory issues, and projections for the future. Most of the respondents identify themselves as principal general counsel and senior counsel.
Spanning 10 industry groups—from financial services to energy, manufacturing, health care, retail, real estate, insurance, education, and technology and telecommunications—companies were spread across all regions of the country and were well represented by size: 22% report revenues under $100 million, while 39% have sales of between $100 million and $999 million, and another 39% at $1 billion and above. Forty-four percent of companies are publicly held (including 58% on the NYSE) and 57% maintain at least one foreign office, with 19% boasting locations in more than 20 countries worldwide.
For a related trends survey, see Kroll Ontrack’s 2008 Electronic Discovery Trends Survey or this discussion on e-discovery trends in the forum.















































