Casepoint Culture Seems Alive and Well

Tech Law Crossroads
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I recently had a chance to catch up with Matt Hamilton, Senior Director of Sales Engineering, and some others at Casepoint. Casepoint is an e-discovery cloud based provider that claims to offer data-based intelligence and full-spectrum eDiscovery. It includes cloud collection, data processing, advanced analytics, and artificial intelligence tools. The platform enables review and customizable productions.

I have been a fan of Casepoint for a while and have written about it before here and here. I like Casepoint because it was laser focused on its product offerings in the eDiscovery area and its products appear to be intuitive and incredibly easy to use. In my experience, both are critical to success in the legal field. I have preached about the ability of lawyers to use the Casepoint tool, not just for eDiscovery production. But also to enhance their own cases and prepare for depositions and trials.

The Casepoint products handily enable litigators to find documents and materials they need to take meaningful depositions and prepare for trial

The Casepoint products handily enable litigators to find documents and materials they need to take meaningful depositions and prepare for trial. I was so impressed by what it could do, I remarked, after playing around with it, that I got the itch to return to litigation to use the tool to prepare for a document intensive deposition. If I had this tool while practicing full time, I might still be doing so. (Yeah, that was a stretch: it would take a lot more than that to get me back full time).

I noted that the cool thing about the Casepoint products is that they help us lawyers do what we need to do easier and do a better job. As a litigator, I know the value of