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Senior Litigation Paralegal
"In 1986, the terms computers and law firms really did not mix," says Dwayne Krager, a litigation paralegal with Reinhardt, Boerner, Van Deuren, s.c.
"Firms that were using computers saw them as ways to move away from the typewriter. Fortunately, when I began my paralegal career in 1986, I was able to work with a firm where computers were used as a litigation process tool. Reinhart, a technologically progressive law firm, allowed him to use his litigation paralegal knowledge to develop into an expert on technology and the litigation process. In addition to the use of litigation software, this knowledge path has lead him down the road of implementing a firm-wide docket system, an in-house imaging center, and one of his greatest achievements, a state-of-the art courtroom called the Trial Science Institute, LLC.
In 1998, in addition to his normal litigation paralegal duties, Dwayne assumed the task of designing, building, promoting, and now running one of the first mock courtrooms with three separate deliberation rooms in the United States. Designed as a model courtroom in Wisconsin, hundreds of lawyers, paralegals, and court staff have toured the Trial Science Institute. The courtroom is currently utilized by Reinhart attorneys and outside law firms for mock trials, mock appellate arguments and to prepare witnesses for actual trial or mediation. Today, Dwayne utilizes his knowledge of the technology and litigation practice to teach other paralegals on how to use technology in the courtroom and how to use these tools to help make their firms more successful.
WORKING WITH OUTSIDE VENDORS
by Dwayne E. Krager
 Many companies are now taking an A-to-Z approach in offering services to the legal marketplace. Copy companies who previously elected not to offer technology services now realize that to remain competitive in today's legal industry, they must provide more than just copy services.
 With this A-to-Z approach to the legal marketplace, it has become imperative for paralegals that make technology vendor and software decisions to know what to ask. In addition, paralegals need the ability to decipher which company is going to offer the best and most accurate document management services.
 The comparison of imaging to photocopying is a relatively simple process, in that once the copy button is pushed and a quality check is made, the job is essentially complete. However, imaging requires technical specifications and up-front decisions that can affect how the images are stored and retrieved. A full-service litigation support vendor who has been providing imaging for many years knows the questions to ask and can make cost-effective suggestions for processing documents.
 When determining which company to use for document management services, you should consider several key criteria. These criteria's are the company's stability, reliability, quality, expertise, security, and price. Part of determining stability involves finding out if the company has retained educated, experienced, and dedicated staff at all levels of the organization, from sales staff to the people who work in production. Because it is important to trust vendors with whom you work, companies with a high volume of successful projects become valuable assets to the litigation process.
 Measuring a company's reliability depends on how well a project is tracked, including where the paper, electronic media, and data deliveries are throughout the production process. Ideal vendors will provide timely project status reports. The company should also test all data deliveries in the target software application before releasing the data for law firm use. Reliability is also measured by how much capacity a company can handle, especially on complex projects that involve a large number of documents.
 The quality of a company's performance is determined by the control measures in place for each project. Quality companies create and retain clear and accurate documentation of the project specifications and note any changes throughout the project. When coding is complete on a project, quality companies develop and follow a comprehensive coding manual to produce a clear and consistent document database.
 The most important criteria you need to consider when selecting document management service is company expertise. The company's expertise must include project managers with a deep level of understanding of how the world of litigation operates and the importance of managing case documents, schedules, and deadlines. In addition, the company should have technical people with experience in the wide variety of database management applications available to the legal industry.
 Security is important because you are relying on an outside company to work with client documents without the direct supervision of an attorney or a member of your firm's staff. All documents must be stored securely and separately from other projects and handled by personnel who agree to follow strict confidentiality guidelines.
 In addition, upon the completion of a project, security involves storing and backing up electronic data for future retrieval.
 Pricing for providing document management services can be determined by getting quotes from at least three separate vendors.
 Companies that succeed in offering complete A-to-Z document management services have the ability to educate paralegals on how to best utilize the technological tools that are available to meet their case needs.
 Storm X allows you to extract and then distribute images, coding.
 Both Trial Director and Sanction are trial presentation software programs that give a trial team the ability to present evidence in either an imaged document or video format. These programs are primarily used at court hearings or arbitrations.
 An A-to-Z approach from companies also applies to when you want to present evidence at trial. Some law firms have the capability to work with trial presentation software without the assistance of an outside company. If nobody from your firm can commit to handling the trial presentation aspect of your case, then a trial consultant may be the answer. Because qualifications for people who represent themselves as trial consultants can vary, it is recommended that the trial team look for a consultant with at least five years of courtroom experience. The consultant should also understand the litigation process, know both trial support hardware/software, and be able to provide advice to the trial team on what is the best methodology to present evidence. A good trial consultant will take over the technical aspects of the trial so that the trial team can focus directly on the case.
 Because the legal vendor and software market has taken an A-to-Z approach to offering services, it is important for you to have an understanding of document management services and the software programs that work the best with these applications. The risk of hiring the wrong document management vendor is greatly reduced when you take the time to plan a project all the way from selecting the proper vendor to the actual software programs that will produce an accurate result.
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