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Ediscovery Strategy: Why Do Corporations Fail without It?

Practice Area:Corporate

EDiscovery strategy is the framework a corporation uses to identify, preserve, collect, and produce electronically stored information (ESI) in response to litigation, regulatory investigation, or internal compliance review.

Corporations face significant cost exposure and procedural risk when eDiscovery planning occurs late or lacks coordination across IT, legal, and business operations. A sound strategy reduces the likelihood of sanctions for spoliation, minimizes production burden, and protects privilege. This article examines the key components of an effective eDiscovery strategy and the common pitfalls corporations encounter in New York litigation and beyond.


1. Preservation Obligations and Timing


The moment a corporation receives notice of a claim, subpoena, or regulatory demand, or when litigation becomes reasonably anticipated, a legal hold obligation arises. Preservation duties typically require halting routine deletion cycles, notifying custodians of document retention, and documenting the hold's scope and distribution. Failure to preserve material evidence can result in sanctions ranging from adverse inferences (the court assumes destroyed evidence would have harmed the spoliating party) to case dismissal or default judgment.

Corporations operating in New York often face heightened scrutiny when preservation notices reach multiple offices or subsidiaries. Courts in the state have emphasized that a single delayed hold notice or incomplete custodian notification can undermine the credibility of the entire preservation effort and support an inference of bad faith. Timing is critical: a corporation should issue a legal hold within days of anticipating litigation, not weeks later when IT systems have already purged backup tapes or email archives.



Documenting the Hold and Custodian Notification


A preservation hold must be documented in writing, specifying the subject matter, the categories of data affected (email, shared drives, databases, and mobile devices), and the date the hold took effect. Custodian acknowledgment or sign-off demonstrates that the corporation took reasonable steps to communicate the obligation. Many corporations use a centralized legal hold management platform to track which custodians received notice, when they acknowledged receipt, and whether they confirmed compliance. This documentation becomes critical evidence if a court later questions whether preservation was genuine.



Scope Calibration


An overly broad hold that captures every file and email from every employee for years can create excessive storage costs and delay production. Conversely, a hold that is too narrow risks missing relevant data and triggering sanctions. The corporation should calibrate the hold to the nature of the dispute. In a contract dispute, custodians might include senior executives and the business unit responsible for contract performance, not the entire company. Periodic review and narrowing of the hold as the case develops reduces costs and demonstrates proportionality, a principle increasingly emphasized in federal and state courts.



2. Collection, Processing, and Workflow Management


Once a hold is in place, the corporation must collect ESI from custodians and systems. Collection involves imaging hard drives, exporting email from servers or client applications, extracting data from databases, and retrieving archived or backup media. The collection process must be forensically sound, maintaining a chain of custody and avoiding alteration of metadata (file creation dates, modification times, sender/recipient information). Improper collection can render evidence inadmissible or subject to challenge.

After collection, the corporation typically processes the data through deduplication (removing identical copies), optical character recognition (OCR) for scanned documents, and indexing for searchability. Processing reduces the volume of data that must be reviewed, which directly cuts review costs. However, processing decisions can be challenged if they result in loss of information or metadata. A corporation should retain processing logs and document the rationale for any filtering or deduplication applied.



Esi Protocol Agreements and Early Collaboration


In many commercial disputes, the parties negotiate an ESI protocol or stipulation early in litigation that governs format of production, scope of searches, cost allocation, and use of technology-assisted review (TAR). These agreements can significantly reduce burden and cost. A corporation should engage in good-faith negotiation of ESI protocols rather than adopting an adversarial posture; courts favor parties that cooperate on ESI logistics. Protocols also reduce the risk of disputes over whether produced data is in the expected format or whether metadata was preserved.



3. Cost Management and Proportionality


EDiscovery costs can escalate rapidly, particularly in high-volume cases involving multiple custodians, legacy systems, or international offices. Corporations must balance the cost of production against the value of the dispute and the proportionality standard now embedded in federal and many state rules of civil procedure. A corporation should estimate eDiscovery costs early and budget accordingly; unexpected cost spikes late in discovery can strain litigation budgets.

Technology-assisted review (TAR), also called predictive coding, uses machine learning to identify relevant documents based on a seed set of documents manually coded by lawyers. TAR can reduce the volume of documents requiring human review by 50 to 80 percent, depending on the case. However, TAR implementation requires upfront investment and careful validation. A corporation should evaluate TAR early in the process and, if using it, document the methodology and results to defend the approach if opposing counsel challenges it.



Vendor Selection and Cost Reduction


Corporations should obtain cost estimates from eDiscovery vendors before committing to collection and processing. Vendors typically charge per gigabyte of data collected, per document processed, and per hour of review labor. A corporation can reduce costs by narrowing custodian lists, setting date ranges, excluding known irrelevant file types, and using keyword filters during collection. However, overly aggressive filtering can result in missing relevant material and later sanctions. The corporation should document the rationale for any filtering and consult with litigation counsel before applying restrictive search terms.



4. Privilege and Work Product Protection


During eDiscovery, corporations must identify and withhold documents protected by attorney-client privilege (confidential communications between the corporation and its counsel seeking legal advice) and work product doctrine (materials prepared in anticipation of litigation). Failure to withhold privileged material constitutes waiver, and the opposing party may use the inadvertently produced documents. A corporation should implement a privilege review process before production, either by having lawyers review flagged documents or by using predictive coding trained to identify privilege indicators.

Corporations should also prepare a privilege log, a detailed index of withheld documents that describes each document's date, sender, recipient, subject matter, and basis for withholding. The log allows opposing counsel to challenge specific withholdings if they believe the privilege claim is unfounded. An incomplete or vague privilege log can result in a court order to produce the withheld documents or sanctions.



Common Privilege Pitfalls in New York Litigation


In New York state courts, parties have occasionally faced adverse rulings when in-house counsel or business executives were copied on emails discussing legal strategy alongside business decisions; courts may find that mixing legal and business purposes defeats privilege protection. A corporation should train employees to use separate email chains for legal advice (copying only counsel) and business decisions, and to mark emails discussing legal matters with a privilege header. Additionally, sharing privileged communications with third parties without a clear business need can waive privilege, so corporations should limit privilege holders and document the necessity of any third-party access.



5. Common Pitfalls and Remedial Measures


Corporations frequently encounter eDiscovery disputes that could have been prevented with better planning. The table below outlines typical pitfalls and prevention measures:

PitfallRiskPrevention Measure
Late preservation noticeAdverse inference, sanctionsIssue hold within days of claim notice; maintain custodian database
Loss of metadata or improper collectionInadmissibility, credibility damageUse certified forensic collection; retain chain of custody
Overbroad or overly narrow search termsOver-production or under-productionCollaborate on search terms; document rationale
Inadvertent privilege waiverLoss of attorney-client protectionPrivilege review before production; maintain privilege log
Failure to negotiate ESI protocolDisputes over format and cost allocationEngage early in ESI protocol discussions; document agreements

Beyond these tactical measures, a corporation should establish an eDiscovery readiness program that includes regular training for IT staff and business unit leaders on preservation obligations, secure document retention policies, and clear escalation procedures when litigation or investigation becomes likely. An eDiscovery strategy developed in advance allows a corporation to respond efficiently when demands arrive.

A sound eDiscovery strategy also benefits corporations facing cross-border or international litigation. When disputes involve parties, data, or witnesses in multiple countries, the corporation may need to navigate different disclosure regimes and data protection laws. Coordinating with counsel familiar with both U.S. discovery rules and foreign legal frameworks, such as through an Asia-US legal strategy approach, can prevent costly compliance errors and preserve the admissibility of evidence obtained overseas.

Corporations should document their eDiscovery protocols, train custodians annually, and review preservation procedures after each litigation cycle. This forward-looking approach reduces exposure to sanctions, demonstrates good faith to courts and opposing parties, and positions the corporation to manage discovery efficiently and cost-effectively as disputes arise.


02 Jun, 2026


The information provided in this article is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Reading or relying on the contents of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship with our firm. For advice regarding your specific situation, please consult a qualified attorney licensed in your jurisdiction.
Certain informational content on this website may utilize technology-assisted drafting tools and is subject to attorney review.

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