If you do any kind of work in legal operations, litigation, or compliance, you will likely see how digital evidence is now changing the nature of all kinds of legal work. Documents will no longer arrive neatly organized in boxes. Instead, you will be dealing with messages, cloud files, shared drives, and email. 

This is often spread out across several different systems. Managing this kind of information at scale requires a much more structured and technologically driven approach than ever before. 

A group of business professionals discussing a contract during a meeting, with a laptop, tablet, and legal gavel visible on the table.

The Shift From Paper to Digital Information

Not long ago, legal evidence was almost always paper-based. Today, most legal information is often created and stored in digital format. 

You may need to review chat history, documents, and even years of email in order to understand the full context of a case or investigation. 

This shift has now increased both the speed and complexity of the legal work that local law firms like WRG do. While digital data is a lot easier to store, it can be much harder to search, sort, and analyze without having the right tools in place

Organizing Evidence Efficiently

When you are handling digital evidence, organization is always going to be critical. Without having clear processes, data can quickly become very fragmented, misplaced, or even duplicated. Legal teams are now relying on structured workflows in order to collect, review information, and process it in a way that is accessible. 

Using dedicated eDiscovery solutions can help to bring order to this entire process. These types of tools will allow you to centralize your data. You’ll be able to have consistent review standards and track changes as evidence starts to move through different stages of any legal matter. 

A close-up of hands signing documents on a wooden table, with one person wearing an orange shirt and a watch.

Managing Time and Deadlines

Legal timelines are usually packed with Internal investigations, regulatory reviews, as well as discovery revenge requests, which can come with some strict guidelines. When evidence has been scattered across several different platforms, tracing timelines can become very difficult. 

Modern digital evidence management tools are going to help you to work much more efficiently so that you can reduce manual steps. Instead of simply chasing files or re-uploading data, you can begin to focus on review and analysis. This will not only save time, but will also reduce the stress that comes when deadlines start approaching. 

A person signing a document with a pen while holding a smartphone on a wooden table.

Maintaining Accuracy and Defensibility

Accuracy matters when you find yourself handling digital evidence. You will need to know exactly where your information came from, how it has been collected, and whether any alterations have been put in place. 

Ensuring that you are maintaining a clear record of different details will support defensibility if the process is later questioned by anyone. When you have technologically driven workflows, it will help you to preserve your metadata, maintain clear audit trails, and also document any actions that you have taken on files. This kind of transparency is expected in legal work today. 

Adapting to Ongoing Change

Digital communication tools are continuing to evolve, and the volume of data that is managed will not shrink anytime soon. Legal teams that are able to adapt to technology supported processes will be positioned to handle all future demands with ease.


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Author

Ben VanderVeen is the founder and editor of Moss & Fog, one of the web’s longest-running visual culture destinations. Since 2009, he’s been finding and framing the most beautiful, surprising, and thought-provoking work in art, architecture, design, and nature — reaching over 325,000 readers each month. He lives in Portland, Oregon.

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