The following outlines practical priorities and tactics that consistently matter in complex, high-exposure matters.
Case assessment and early triage
– Conduct a rapid but thorough risk assessment to map exposure, key witnesses, document sources, and insurance coverage. Early triage identifies deal-breakers (e.g., missing insurance, spoliated evidence) and shapes litigation budget decisions.
– Prioritize preservation and e-discovery protocols immediately. Litigation holds, defensible deletion policies, and clear custodian lists prevent costly sanctions and credibility loss.
Control the narrative
– High-stakes disputes are fought as much in perception as in law. Develop a concise case theory and supporting timeline that stakeholders — clients, boards, regulators, and juries — can easily understand.
– Media and stakeholder communications should be coordinated with litigation strategy. A misleading public statement can undercut settlement leverage or produce adverse evidence in discovery.
Discovery and technology
– Invest in proportional e-discovery tools and skilled providers.
Early use of targeted collections, analytics, and predictive coding reduces time and cost while surfacing key themes and custodians.
– Maintain tight privilege logs and use privilege review platforms to avoid inadvertent waivers. Structured workflows for confidentiality designations and clawback agreements minimize risk.
Expert witnesses and evidence strategy
– Select experts not only for technical credentials but for credibility under cross-examination and the ability to explain complex topics to non-experts. Prepare joint or rebuttal expert strategies to neutralize surprise.
– Build demonstrative exhibits and timelines that translate technical evidence into persuasive courtroom visuals. Simulations, charts, and concise demonstratives increase juror comprehension and retention.
Trial readiness and alternative dispute resolution
– Treat mediation and settlement negotiations as parallel to trial prep.
Strong settlement positions come from being fully trial-ready: budgets, witness preparation, and a clear damages model.
– Use mock trials, focus groups, and jury consultants to test messaging and anticipate weaknesses. Iterative testing of themes allows early course correction.
Damage modeling and insurance
– Develop transparent, defensible damage models early and stress-test them with adversary theories. Engage financial and industry experts to validate assumptions and rebut overreaching claims.
– Coordinate closely with insurers; promptly involve coverage counsel to maximize recovery opportunities and manage coverage disputes.
Courtroom tactics and procedural warfare

– Anticipate dispositive motions, motions in limine, and evidentiary skirmishes. Winning key procedural battles (admitting crucial evidence, excluding damaging testimony) can decide the case before a jury verdict.
– Preserve appellate issues through careful contemporaneous objections and clear trial record creation when an appeal is a plausible outcome.
Cybersecurity and data privacy
– Protect highly sensitive materials with robust cybersecurity controls. A data breach during litigation can create regulatory exposure and undermine client confidence.
– Consider protective orders, segmented repositories, and role-based access to minimize unnecessary disclosure.
Team composition and cost control
– Build a nimble team blending big-firm firepower with boutique expertise and experienced local counsel for courtroom dynamics. Clearly defined staffing plans and fee structures help control costs without sacrificing quality.
– Regular budget reviews and scenario planning keep clients informed and enable strategic choices—settle, continue investment, or shift tactics—based on evolving risk tolerance.
High-stakes litigation rewards those who prepare meticulously, communicate clearly, and adapt strategically.
Emphasizing narrative coherence, defensible discovery practices, expert credibility, and disciplined cost management positions a party to protect value and achieve preferable outcomes.