Why You Need to Think about Data Storage Differently
- By:
- Partner Created |
- September 11, 2024 |
- minute read
This blog post was first featured on our partner Exterro's website and is based on a collaborative webinar between Archive360 and Exterro titled "Why e-Discovery Data Storage Costs are Breaking Your Budget".
While every organization’s technology infrastructure and data landscape are unique, it's generally accepted that both the size and the complexity of data environments have grown exponentially over the past few years. Organizations use more software applications and communication tools and create, store, and manage more data in more ways than ever before.
On the positive side, this explosion of data allows organizations to realize more value in their business operations. But this increase in data volumes also increases the risks associated with that data. Whether the concern is litigation, compliance with privacy regulations, or mitigating the risks posed by cybersecurity incidents, organizations must implement processes and technology to manage data across its lifecycle.
Brad Harris, Vice President of Solutions at Exterro, says, “Today, a standard Microsoft 365 mailbox might contain 50 gigabytes of data—a volume of data that was unheard of just a few years ago. However, if there’s a requirement to preserve data in that mailbox for litigation, that could easily increase to 100 gigabytes.”
The Importance of Information Governance
Much of the data being created has obligations associated with it. There may be privacy or compliance regulations that require it to be retained for—or disposed of after—a certain period of time. Data may need to be retained, produced, and reviewed for discovery or disclosure during litigation or because of a cybersecurity incident. To manage their data efficiently and effectively, organizations need to understand how their employees are communicating and where that data is stored. That understanding allows them to improve their information governance, retention, and disposition over its entire lifecycle.
George Tziahanas, VP of Compliance at Archive 360, urges organizations, “Put frameworks in place to manage information across all those different dimensions. You need to deliver security, privacy, and compliance. You need data retention capabilities and the ability to search, retrieve, preserve and produce data. Information governance isn’t just about storage. It's actually about all these other requirements that exist around data storage.”
Organizations need to be able to fulfil these requirements not only accurately, but also on a timely basis. Chris Costello, Partner at Kirkland Ellis, notes, “One of the challenges whenever you're talking about finding and producing data in a litigation or regulatory context is how long does it take you to find what you have? How long does it take to identify what you need, review it, and produce it? And of course the same concerns apply on the business side as well.” Growing volume isn’t the only data concern organizations face; data complexity is also a factor. He continues, “The pandemic and work from home introduced many new applications, and the complexity and diversity of data environments has certainly evolved. They might also be part of 100 Slack channels—and also communicate via text messages, audio, video, emojis, and more.” [View Archive360 solutions for Slack, Zoom, and Modern Communications here.]
The Costs of Data Storage
While the costs of physical and cloud storage of data are lower per terabyte than ever before, the volumes of data organisations produce today still translate into significant costs. On premises, storing a petabyte of data costs well over a million dollars, while in the cloud the costs can be 50% to 75% lower.
However, storage space is far from the only associated cost. Organizations must meet all the obligations associated with that data. Many regulations require organizations to dispose of data they no longer need after a certain amount of time. Deleting data that no longer serves a business purpose also eliminates the risk it might pose in litigation and if a data breach occurs. Costello says, “It's not only the monetary cost of storing the information. It’s the time that you spend setting up processes around it: managing the data, auditing it, making sure you're getting the information where it needs to be, as well as the increased privacy and cybersecurity risks that accrue when you save more data.”[Listen to podcast Ep 43 on why keeping data too long could be illegal]
Tziahanas explains a key lessons that organizations must learn--and one that has the potential to transform how they think about their data. “The value of data tends to decrease over time, but at the same time, the risk increases. If you plot those two curves, with the line of risk going up, and the value of information going down, somewhere those lines intersect, and the value of that information is less than the risk it poses.”
Once organisations understand this truth, they understand the necessity of having strong information governance and data retention policies and technology in place. Laying a strong foundation for data management offers organizations an opportunity to manage their budgets associated with litigation and privacy compliance more efficiently.
Watch the full webinar below to gain more valuable insights from this discussion on eDiscovery and storage costs in the modern enterprise organization. Contact us directly to learn more.Your legacy application is built on outdated technology, such as unsupported hardware or software, which makes it difficult to maintain and poses significant data security risks.
WEBINAR
Why e-Discovery Data Storage Costs are Breaking Your Budget
In this webinar, Archive360 and partner Exterro dive into common questions for legal teams who have e-discovery data stored on local hardware like servers and computers, or in legacy cloud tools like Relativity.
- How and where are you storing your e-discovery data?
- Are hefty data storage costs impacting your budget?
- Do you think your e-discovery data may be at risk?
This content has been created via one of our partner companies and is written based on webinars, presentations, whitepapers, blogs etc. that a member of Archive360 has orchestrated. We are grateful to our partners for use of this joint educational material.