The teams that win manage these dimensions proactively.
Start with early case assessment
– Conduct an early, rigorous assessment to map exposure, evidentiary strengths, and key legal theories. This shapes budget, discovery scope, and settlement posture.
– Use a cross-functional team (litigation counsel, in-house legal, finance, compliance, PR) to set objectives tied to business priorities: defeat, damage control, test precedent, or leverage for settlement.
Control discovery and evidence risk
– Take immediate steps to preserve relevant information and implement defensible litigation hold processes.
Spoliation risks escalate costs and undermine credibility.
– Use technology-assisted review and advanced analytics to triage massive data sets efficiently.

Focused custodial interviews and targeted ESI requests reduce burden and surface high-value documents sooner.
– Build robust privilege logs and audit trails; they matter in contested motions and eventual appellate review.
Manage experts and demonstratives
– Select expert witnesses not only for credentials but for courtroom presence and ability to simplify complex issues. Early engagement lets experts shape testing, sampling, and report strategy.
– Invest in clear demonstratives and forensic visualizations. Jurors and judges respond to narratives that turn technical evidence into a simple story of cause and consequence.
Optimize motion practice and forum strategy
– Use targeted dispositive and evidentiary motions to define the record and narrow issues before trial.
Efficient motion practice can force early resolution or significantly reduce trial scope.
– Evaluate forum advantages, including procedural rules, judge track record, and potential for appeal.
Strategic forum selection can alter leverage in settlement talks.
Prepare the trial playbook
– Create a living trial playbook detailing themes, witness outlines, key exhibits, and rebuttal strategies.
Run focused mock examinations and juror focus groups to refine messaging and timing.
– Plan for logistics: witness availability, demonstrative tech, and contingency plans for remote or hybrid proceedings. Modern courts expect seamless tech-enabled presentation.
Negotiate with purpose
– Approach settlement discussions with clear walk-away thresholds, alternative deal structures, and attention to non-monetary terms (injunctive relief, confidentiality, release language). Structured settlements and insurance solutions can bridge valuation gaps.
– Consider mediation early to test opponent flexibility and preserve control over narrative and terms.
Financial planning and funding options
– Build a litigation budget with stage gates tied to case milestones. Regular forecasting reduces surprises and supports informed decisions about escalation or resolution.
– Explore third-party litigation funding or insurance where appropriate to manage cash flow and transfer certain risks, but weigh costs, control implications, and confidentiality issues.
Protect reputation and regulatory exposure
– Coordinate legal strategy with communications and compliance teams. A consistent, legally vetted external narrative minimizes secondary damage and limits sources of additional claims.
– Monitor regulatory trends that could affect the litigation posture or create parallel investigations.
Continuous evaluation and flexibility
– Reassess strategy at each milestone: discovery completion, expert disclosures, pretrial rulings, and trial readiness. New facts or rulings can flip leverage quickly.
– Maintain disciplined documentation of strategic choices to support privilege claims and appellate positions.
High-stakes litigation is a marathon of choices. Teams that combine disciplined risk management, focused use of technology, and clear narrative control maximize the chance of favorable outcomes while protecting enterprise value.